Publication:
In vitro characterization of a novel magnetic fibrin-agarose hydrogel for cartilage tissue engineering.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2020

Authors

Bonhome-Espinosa, Ana Belen
Campos, Fernando
Durand-Herrera, Daniel
Sanchez-Lopez, Jose Dario
Schaub, Sebastien
Duran, Juan D G
Lopez-Lopez, Modesto T
Carriel, Victor

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier BV
Metrics
Google Scholar
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

The encapsulation of cells into biopolymer matrices enables the preparation of engineered substitute tissues. Here we report the generation of novel 3D magnetic biomaterials by encapsulation of magnetic nanoparticles and human hyaline chondrocytes within fibrin-agarose hydrogels, with potential use as articular hyaline cartilage-like tissues. By rheological measurements we observed that, (i) the incorporation of magnetic nanoparticles resulted in increased values of the storage and loss moduli for the different times of cell culture; and (ii) the incorporation of human hyaline chondrocytes into nonmagnetic and magnetic fibrin-agarose biomaterials produced a control of their swelling capacity in comparison with acellular nonmagnetic and magnetic fibrin-agarose biomaterials. Interestingly, the in vitro viability and proliferation results showed that the inclusion of magnetic nanoparticles did not affect the cytocompatibility of the biomaterials. What is more, immunohistochemistry showed that the inclusion of magnetic nanoparticles did not negatively affect the expression of type II collagen of the human hyaline chondrocytes. Summarizing, our results suggest that the generation of engineered hyaline cartilage-like tissues by using magnetic fibrin-agarose hydrogels is feasible. The resulting artificial tissues combine a stronger and stable mechanical response, with promising in vitro cytocompatibility. Further research would be required to elucidate if for longer culture times additional features typical of the extracellular matrix of cartilage could be expressed by human hyaline chondrocytes within magnetic fibrin-agarose hydrogels.

Description

MeSH Terms

Cartilage, Articular
Cells, Cultured
Chondrocytes
Fibrin
Humans
Hydrogels
Magnetic Phenomena
Sepharose
Tissue Engineering

DeCS Terms

Sefarosa
Ingeniería de tejidos
Humanos
Hidrogeles
Fibrina
Fenómenos magnéticos
Células cultivadas
Condrocitos
Cartílago articular

CIE Terms

Keywords

Biomechanical properties, Cell-biomaterial interactions, Fibrin-agarose, Hyaline cartilage, Magnetic nanoparticles, Tissue engineering

Citation

Bonhome-Espinosa AB, Campos F, Durand-Herrera D, Sánchez-López JD, Schaub S, Durán JDG, et al. In vitro characterization of a novel magnetic fibrin-agarose hydrogel for cartilage tissue engineering. J Mech Behav Biomed Mater. 2020 Apr;104:103619.