Title :
Comparing of various collagens for application of cartilage tissue engineering
Author :
Sang-Hyug Park ; Tongjin Song ; Tae Soo Bae ; Ara, J. ; Sun Hee Hwang ; Gon Khang ; Byoung-Hyun Min ; Park, So Ra
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Biomed. Eng., Jungwon Univ., Goesan, South Korea
Abstract :
Mammalian collagens have been used as a base material for collagen matrices in tissue engineering applications. However, collagens of aquatic animals and human sources can potentially be utilized as a safe and viable substitute, because collagen products of bovine origin have been shown to be contaminated with some diseases. In the present study, we prepared and investigated collagen materials from several sources (bovine skin, porcine skin, amniotic membrane and starfish) as matrix biomaterials. Detailed investigations on their physicochemical and biological properties, such as amino acid composition, thermal transition temperature, molar mass, IR spectra, and cell response, suggested strong relations between their amino acid composition and intermolecular structure, thermal property, and cell response. Selectively, an amniotic membrane collagen scaffold was evaluated for cartilage tissue engineering in three types of three-dimensional 3D culture (sponge, gel and micro bead forms) and compared with a bovine matrix. Results showed that amniotic membrane collagen has a potential as an alternative source of collagen for use in tissue engineering.
Keywords :
Fourier transform spectra; biochemistry; biomedical materials; biomembranes; cellular biophysics; contamination; diseases; infrared spectra; molecular biophysics; molecular configurations; proteins; skin; tissue engineering; IR spectra; amino acid composition; amniotic membrane collagen scaffold; aquatic animals; biological properties; biomaterial matrix; bovine matrix; bovine skin; cartilage tissue engineering; cell response; collagen materials; collagen matrices; collagen products; contamination; diseases; intermolecular structure; mammalian collagens; molar mass; physicochemical properties; porcine skin; starfish; thermal transition temperature; three-dimensional 3D culture; Amniotic membrane; Bovine; Collagen scaffold; Porcine; Starfish; Tissue engineering;
Conference_Titel :
Biomedical Engineering and Sciences (IECBES), 2012 IEEE EMBS Conference on
Conference_Location :
Langkawi
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-1664-4
DOI :
10.1109/IECBES.2012.6498134