Litcius/Paper detail

Tailoring the assembly of collagen fibers in alginate microspheres

Sarah Lehnert, Pawel Sikorski

2021Materials Science and Engineering C14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The application of microspheres instead of bulk hydrogels in cell-laden biomaterials offers multiple advantages such as a high surface-to-volume-ratio and, consequently, a better nutrition and oxygen transfer to and from cells. The preparation of inert alginate microspheres is facile, quick, and well-established and the fabrication of alginate-collagen microspheres has been previously reported. However, no detailed characterization of the collagen fibrillogenesis in the alginate matrix is available. We use second-harmonic imaging microscopy reflection confocal microscopy and turbidity assay to study the assembly of collagen in alginate microspheres. We show that the assembly of collagen fibers in a gelled alginate matrix is a complex process that can be aided by addition of small polar molecules, such as glycine and by a careful selection of the gelling buffer used to prepare alginate hydrogels.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceSelf-healing hydrogelsFibrillogenesisMicrosphereChemical engineeringNanotechnologyBiomedical engineeringFibrilBiophysicsPolymer chemistryEngineeringBiologyMedicineCollagen: Extraction and Characterization3D Printing in Biomedical ResearchHydrogels: synthesis, properties, applications