Lyophilized Silk Sponges: A Versatile Biomaterial Platform for Soft Tissue Engineering
Author(s) -
Jelena RnjakKovacina,
Lindsay S. Wray,
Kelly A. Burke,
Tess Torregrosa,
Julianne M. Golinski,
Wenwen Huang,
David L. Kaplan
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
acs biomaterials science and engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.082
H-Index - 50
ISSN - 2373-9878
DOI - 10.1021/ab500149p
Subject(s) - silk , biomaterial , tissue engineering , scaffold , sponge , mesenchymal stem cell , crystallinity , materials science , cell adhesion , in vivo , biomedical engineering , chemistry , adhesion , nanotechnology , microbiology and biotechnology , composite material , biology , medicine , botany
We present a silk biomaterial platform with highly tunable mechanical and degradation properties for engineering and regeneration of soft tissues such as, skin, adipose, and neural tissue, with elasticity properties in the kilopascal range. Lyophilized silk sponges were prepared under different process conditions and the effect of silk molecular weight, concentration and crystallinity on 3D scaffold formation, structural integrity, morphology, mechanical and degradation properties, and cell interactions in vitro and in vivo were studied. Tuning the molecular weight distribution (via degumming time) of silk allowed the formation of stable, highly porous, 3D scaffolds that held form with silk concentrations as low as 0.5% wt/v. Mechanical properties were a function of silk concentration and scaffold degradation was driven by beta-sheet content. Lyophilized silk sponges supported the adhesion of mesenchymal stem cells throughout 3D scaffolds, cell proliferation in vitro, and cell infiltration and scaffold remodeling when implanted subcutaneously in vivo.
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