Litcius/Paper detail

Three dimensional polyvinyl alcohol scaffolds modified with collagen for HepG2 cell culture

Di Meng, Xiongxin Lei, Yang Li, Yingjun Kong, Da‐Wei Huang, Guifeng Zhang

2020Journal of Biomaterials Applications16 citationsDOI

Abstract

The creation of in vitro functional hepatic tissue simulating micro environmental niche of the native liver is a keen area of research due to its demand in bioartificial liver. However, it is still unclear how to maintain benign cell function while achieving the sufficient cell quantity. In this work, we aim to prepare a novel scaffold for the culture of HepG2 cells, a liver cell line, by modifying polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) scaffold with collagen (COL). PVA is a kind of synthetic biostable polymer with high hydrophilicity in the human body, has been widely used in the biomedical field. However, the use of PVA is limited in cell cultures due to lack of biologically active functional groups. In this study, amino silane (KH-550), glutaraldehyde and native type I collagen were used to modify three-dimensional PVA scaffold to establish a suitable composite scaffold for hepatocyte culture. Three types of composite scaffolds were prepared for different collagen content, named as PVA/COL (0.2%), PVA/COL (0.5%) and PVA/COL (0.8%), respectively. The composite scaffolds were characterized by SEM, XPS, FTIR, MS, porosity estimation and water contact angle measurement. The PVA/COL (0.8%) scaffolds had the highest collagen content of 12.13%. The composite scaffold showed high porosity with interconnected pores. Furthermore, the biocompatibility between HepG2 cells and scaffolds was evaluated by the ability of cell proliferation, albumin secretion, as well as urea synthesis. The coating of collagen on PVA scaffolds promoted hydrophilicity and HepG2 cell adhesion. Additionally, enhanced cell proliferation, increased albumin secretion and urea synthesis were observed in HepG2 cells growing on collagen-coated three-dimensional PVA scaffolds.

Topics & Concepts

Polyvinyl alcoholBiocompatibilityGlutaraldehydeScaffoldMaterials scienceComposite numberTissue engineeringCell adhesionAdhesionChemical engineeringBiomedical engineeringProtein adsorptionPolymerChemistryComposite materialChromatographyMedicineMetallurgyEngineeringTissue Engineering and Regenerative MedicineElectrospun Nanofibers in Biomedical Applications3D Printing in Biomedical Research