Title :
A programmable shape-changing scaffold for regenerative medicine
Author :
Tseng, Ling-Fang ; Mather, Patrick T. ; Henderson, James H.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Biomed. & Chem. Eng., Syracuse Univ., Syracuse, NY, USA
Abstract :
Conventional tissue engineering scaffolds have limited ability to undergo programmed changes in physical properties. Here we present a thermo-responsive and biocompatible tissue engineering scaffold prepared by electrospinning a shape memory polymer (SMP). SMPs have characteristics which allow them to be manipulated and fixed in a temporary shape and later recover back to their permanent shape on command. We hypothesized that a programmed change in scaffold architecture could control cell body orientation. To test this hypothesis, we uniaxially stretched an initially random mesh (the permanent state) and fixed it to a temporarily aligned mesh. After first seeding cells on the temporarily aligned mesh, we triggered a change in shape by increasing the temperature from 30°C to 37°C which resulted in the scaffold structure recovering back to its initial random structure. Alignment of cell bodies was quantified by two-dimensional fast Fourier transform (2D FFT) analysis of filamentous actin fibers. We found that before triggering a change in shape, cells aligned preferentially along the direction of fiber orientation. After the shape-memory-activated structure change, cells lost their preferential alignment. Shape-changing scaffolds based on this concept are anticipated to provide a powerful tool to study cell mechanobiology and increase tissue engineering scaffold functionality.
Keywords :
cellular biophysics; electrospinning; fast Fourier transforms; fibres; polymers; shape memory effects; tissue engineering; 2D FFT analysis; biocompatible tissue engineering scaffold; cell body alignment; cell body orientation; cell mechanobiology; conventional tissue engineering scaffolds; electrospinning; fiber orientation; filamentous actin fibers; programmable shape-changing scaffold; regenerative medicine; scaffold structure; shape memory polymer; shape-changing scaffolds; shape-memory-activated structure change; temperature 30 degC to 37 degC; temporarily aligned mesh; thermoresponsive tissue engineering scaffold; two-dimensional fast Fourier transform analysis; Computer architecture; Fast Fourier transforms; Microprocessors; Physiology; Polymers; Shape; Tissue engineering;
Conference_Titel :
Bioengineering Conference (NEBEC), 2012 38th Annual Northeast
Conference_Location :
Philadelphia, PA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-1141-0
DOI :
10.1109/NEBC.2012.6207046