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Biofabrication and Characterization of Alginate Dialdehyde‐Gelatin Microcapsules Incorporating Bioactive Glass for Cell Delivery Application
Author(s) -
Reakasame Supachai,
Jin Anbang,
Zheng Kai,
Qu Muchao,
Boccaccini Aldo R.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
macromolecular bioscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.924
H-Index - 105
eISSN - 1616-5195
pISSN - 1616-5187
DOI - 10.1002/mabi.202000138
Subject(s) - gelatin , bioactive glass , biofabrication , particle size , extrusion , composite number , chemical engineering , viability assay , chemistry , materials science , nuclear chemistry , biomedical engineering , tissue engineering , composite material , cell , organic chemistry , biochemistry , medicine , engineering
The effect of the incorporation of 45S5 bioactive glass (BG) microparticles (mean particle size ≈ 2 µm) on the fabrication and physicochemical properties of alginate dialdehyde‐gelatin hydrogel capsules is investigated. The addition of BG particles decreases the hydrogel gelation time by ≈79% and 91% for the samples containing 0.1% w/v and 0.5% w/v BG, respectively. Moreover, it results in increasing average diameter of hydrogel capsules produced via a pressure‐driven extrusion technique from about 1000 µm for the samples without BG to about 1700 and 1900 µm for the samples containing BG at concentrations of 0.1% w/v and 0.5% w/v, respectively. The presence of BG particles in the capsules decreases the degradation rate and improves the bioactivity of the materials. The viability of MG‐63 cells encapsulated in all samples increases during the first 7 d of cultivation and maintains the same level during 21 d of cultivation. The early cell viability in samples containing BG is lower than that in samples without BG. The results show that 45S5 BG can positively regulate the osteogenic activity of cells incorporated in hydrogel capsules. The fabricated composite capsules exhibit promising potential for cell delivery in bone regeneration applications.

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