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Micromolding of photocrosslinkable hyaluronic acid for cell encapsulation and entrapment

โœ Scribed by Ali Khademhosseini; George Eng; Judy Yeh; Junji Fukuda; James Blumling III; Robert Langer; Jason A. Burdick


Book ID
102294120
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
466 KB
Volume
79A
Category
Article
ISSN
1549-3296

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โœฆ Synopsis


Abstract

Micropatterning of hydrogels is potentially useful for a variety of applications, including tissue engineering, fundamental biological studies, diagnostics, and highโ€throughput screening. Although synthetic polymers have been developed for these applications, natural polymers such as polysaccharides may have advantages for biological samples and cellโ€based devices because they are natural components of the in vivo microenvironment. In this study, we synthesized and used hyaluronic acid (HA) modified with photoreactive methacrylates to fabricate microstructures as functional components of microfabricated devices. To demonstrate the universality of this approach, two types of microstructures were formed. In the first approach, HA microstructures were fabricated and used as docking templates to enable the subsequent formation of cell microarrays within low shear stress regions of the patterns. Cells within these microwells remained viable, could generate spheroids, and could be retrieved using mechanical disruption. In the second approach, cells were encapsulated directly within the HA hydrogels. Arrays of viable embryonic stem (ES) cells or fibroblasts were encapsulated within HA hydrogels and could later be recovered using enzymatic digestion of the microstructures. These results demonstrate that it is possible to incorporate photocrosslinkable HA, a natural, versatile, degradable, and biocompatible biopolymer, into microโ€electromechanical systems. ยฉ 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res, 2006


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