Litcius/Paper detail

Addition of glycerol enhances the flexibility of gelatin hydrogel sheets; application for in utero tissue engineering

Miho Watanabe, Haiying Li, Masaya Yamamoto, Jun‐ichi Horinaka, Yasuhiko Tabata, Alan W. Flake

2020Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B Applied Biomaterials23 citationsDOI

Abstract

Gelatin hydrogels are naturally derived scaffolds useful for tissue engineering because of their cytocompatibility and controllable degradability. However, they are brittle and inflexible when dry, which limits their use for in utero tissue engineering in large animal models. Therefore, in this study, we attempted to generate flexible gelatin sheets by adding various plasticizers with different molecular weights (MW). We systematically evaluated the flexibility, sustainability, and potential clinical utility of the resulting flexible gelatin sheets. Gelatin sheets with low-MW plasticizers, such as monosaccharides or sugar alcohols, showed a reduced tensile modulus in dynamic viscoelasticity, which reflected their actual flexibility. Wet gelatin sheets containing plasticizers showed higher tensile strength than the nonplasticizer control, although wet gelatin sheets under all conditions had a much lower tensile strength than dry gelatin sheets. In a functional study, gelatin sheets containing glycerol, which has the lowest MW among sugar alcohols, showed encouraging results, such as good fit to the curvature of the experimental animal, biocompatibility, and suitability for endoscopic approaches. The findings of this study should enable the expansion of future applications for flexible gelatin sheets.

Topics & Concepts

GelatinMaterials sciencePlasticizerUltimate tensile strengthSelf-healing hydrogelsTissue engineeringBiocompatibilityComposite materialGlycerolViscoelasticityFlexibility (engineering)Chemical engineeringBiomedical engineeringPolymer chemistryOrganic chemistryChemistryEngineeringMedicineMetallurgyStatisticsMathematicsElectrospun Nanofibers in Biomedical ApplicationsTissue Engineering and Regenerative MedicineSurgical Sutures and Adhesives