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      Novel hybrid membrane of chitosan/poly (ε-caprolactone) for tissue engineering

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          Abstract

          We investigated the potential use of 3D hybrid membrane: poly (ε-caprolactone) (PCL) mesh using rotary jet spinning with subsequent chitosan (CH) coating. The morphological examinations by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) were proved the efficiency of this technique on obtaining relative homogeneous PCL fiber mats (15,49 ± 4,1µm), with high surface porosity (1,06 ± 0,41µm) and effective CH coating. The feasibility of rotary jet spinning allowed the solvent evaporation during the process; this fact was verified by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), indeed also had verified changes in thermal properties on the hybrid membrane, since the present of CH. It was investigated the mechanical properties of the hybrid membrane and CH film, the data were that the samples presents good tensile modulus but low strain at the break. In addition, it was verified the biocompatibility properties in vitro using Vero cells. PCL mesh demonstrated cells more spread vastly in the pore surface, with attachments in between fibers indicating the potential for cell adhesion. The films samples (CH and hybrid membrane) resulted in a cells layer on the surfaces with an intense staining (metachromasy), which is the result of cells more active. The cell counting -5 days of culture- and the MTT assay -21 days of culture- demonstrated that the materials tested proved to be different from the positive control and equal to each other and this fact, in our view, this indicates a satisfactory proliferation. Thus, based on the results here, this novel hybrid membrane provides an attractive material for tissue engineering applications.

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          Most cited references14

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          Characterization of chitosan-polycaprolactone blends for tissue engineering applications.

          The objective of this work was to study the effect of blending chitosan with poly(epsilon-caprolactone) (PCL) on their biomechanical properties. After testing the effect of molecular weight (MW), temperature, and humidity on the tensile properties in dry, wet at 25 degrees C and wet at 37 degrees C conditions, chitosan with a MW>310 kD was selected for use in the blend. Homogeneous blends of 25%, 50% and 75% PCL compositions were formed by dissolving chitosan and 80 kD PCL in a common solvent of approximately 77% aqueous acetic acid. Taking advantage of the low melting point of PCL, blend membranes were processed at 25, 37, 55 degrees C water bath or 55 degrees C oven into films. Also, membranes were solvent annealed using chloroform vapors. Tensile properties were analyzed in wet conditions at 25 degrees C. Support for cell viability and distribution of cytoskeletal actin were analyzed by in vitro cell culture of mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs). Differential scanning calorimetry studies indicated the miscibility of the two components when approximated using Nishi-Wang equation. Drying the films at 55 degrees C in an oven formed membranes without separation of two phases. However, the analyzed tensile properties showed no significant alterations relative to chitosan. On the contrary, significant improvements were observed after solvent annealing. Interestingly, increased viability and redistribution of actin fibers was observed on blends formed with 50% PCL and 75% PCL relative to individual polymers. In summary, 50:50 blends when processed at 55 degrees C in an oven showed significant improvement in mechanical properties as well as support for cellular activity relative to chitosan.
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            Precision extruding deposition and characterization of cellular poly‐ε‐caprolactone tissue scaffolds

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              A multilayered scaffold of a chitosan and gelatin hydrogel supported by a PCL core for cardiac tissue engineering.

              A three-dimensional scaffold composed of self-assembled polycaprolactone (PCL) sandwiched in a gelatin-chitosan hydrogel was developed for use as a biodegradable patch with a potential for surgical reconstruction of congenital heart defects. The PCL core provides surgical handling, suturability and high initial tensile strength, while the gelatin-chitosan scaffold allows for cell attachment, with pore size and mechanical properties conducive to cardiomyocyte migration and function. The ultimate tensile stress of the PCL core, made from blends of 10, 46 and 80kDa (Mn) PCL, was controllable in the range of 2-4MPa, with lower average molecular weight PCL blends correlating with lower tensile stress. Blends with lower molecular weight PCL also had faster degradation (controllable from 0% to 7% weight loss in saline over 30 days) and larger pores. PCL scaffolds supporting a gelatin-chitosan emulsion gel showed no significant alteration in tensile stress, strain or tensile modulus. However, the compressive modulus of the composite tissue was similar to that of native tissue (∼15kPa for 50% gelatin and 50% chitosan). Electron microscopy revealed that the gelatin-chitosan gel had a three-dimensional porous structure, with a mean pore diameter of ∼80μm, showed migration of neonatal rat ventricular myocytes (NRVM), maintained NRVM viability for over 7 days, and resulted in spontaneously beating scaffolds. This multi-layered scaffold has sufficient tensile strength and surgical handling for use as a cardiac patch, while allowing migration or pre-loading of cardiac cells in a biomimetic environment to allow for eventual degradation of the patch and incorporation into native tissue.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Biomatter
                Biomatter
                BIOM
                Biomatter
                Landes Bioscience
                2159-2527
                2159-2535
                05 August 2014
                2014
                05 August 2015
                : 4
                : e29508
                Affiliations
                [1 ]University of Campinas; Materials Engineering Department; Campinas, Brazil
                [2 ]Biofabris; Campinas, Brazil
                [3 ]Federal University of ABC; Santo André; São Paulo, Brazil
                [4 ]Chemical Department; Grup B5IDA; Universidad Simón Bolívar; Caracas, Venezuela
                Author notes
                [* ]Correspondence to: Guinea BC Cardoso, Email: guicardoso@ 123456fem.unicamp.br
                Article
                2014BIOMATTER0008R 29508
                10.4161/biom.29508
                4143402
                25093398
                8d4fe023-2c28-4499-816b-1b3419afcd35
                Copyright © 2014 Landes Bioscience

                This is an open-access article licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License. The article may be redistributed, reproduced, and reused for non-commercial purposes, provided the original source is properly cited.

                History
                : 14 January 2014
                : 05 May 2014
                : 05 June 2014
                Categories
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                rotary jet spinning,chitosan,polycaprolactone,tissue engineering,hybrid membrane

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