Julius Wolff Institute, Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Augustenburger Platz 1, 13353 Berlin, Germany; Berlin-Brandenburg Center and School for Regenerative Therapies, Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Augustenburger Platz 1, 13353 Berlin, Germany; Technical University Berlin, Straße des 17, Juni 135, 10623 Berlin, Germany.
Technical University Berlin, Straße des 17, Juni 135, 10623 Berlin, Germany.
Mater Sci Eng C Mater Biol Appl. 2019 Oct;103:109760. doi: 10.1016/j.msec.2019.109760. Epub 2019 May 16.
In the design of macroporous biomaterial scaffolds, attention is payed predominantly to the readily accessible macroscopic mechanical properties rather than to the mechanical properties experienced by the cells adhering to the material. However, the direct cell mechanical environment has been shown to be of special relevance for biological processes such as proliferation, differentiation and extracellular matrix formation both in vitro and in vivo. In this study we investigated how individual architectural features of highly aligned macroporous collagen scaffolds contribute to its mechanical properties on the macroscopic vs. the microscopic scale. Scaffolds were produced by controlled freezing and freeze-drying, a method frequently used for manufacturing of macroporous biomaterials. The individual architectural features of the biomaterial were carefully characterized to develop a finite element model (FE-model) that finally provided insights in the relation between the biomaterial's mechanical properties on the macro-scale and the properties on the micro-scale, as experienced by adhering cells. FE-models were validated by experimental characterization of the scaffolds, both on the macroscopic and the microscopic level, using mechanical compression testing and atomic force microscopy. As a result, a so-called cell-effective stiffness of these non-trivial scaffold architectures could be predicted for the first time. A linear dependency between the macroscopic scaffold stiffness and the cell-effective stiffness was found, with the latter being consistently higher by a factor of 6.4 ± 0.6. The relevance of the cell-effective stiffness in controlling progenitor cell differentiation was confirmed in vitro. The obtained information about the cell-effective stiffness is of particular relevance for the early stages of tissue regeneration, when the cells first populate and interact with the biomaterial. Beyond the specific biomaterial investigated here, the introduced method is transferable to other complex biomaterial architectures. Design-optimization in 3D macroporous scaffolds that are based on a deeper understanding of the mechanical environment provided to the cells will help to enhance biomaterial-based tissue regeneration approaches.
在大孔生物材料支架的设计中,主要关注的是易于获得的宏观机械性能,而不是粘附在材料上的细胞所经历的机械性能。然而,直接的细胞力学环境已经被证明对于体外和体内的生物过程,如增殖、分化和细胞外基质形成,具有特殊的相关性。在这项研究中,我们研究了高度取向的大孔胶原支架的单个结构特征如何在宏观和微观尺度上对其机械性能产生影响。支架通过控制冷冻和冷冻干燥来制备,这是一种常用于制造大孔生物材料的方法。仔细地对生物材料的单个结构特征进行了表征,以开发一个有限元模型(FE 模型),最终提供了关于生物材料宏观机械性能与粘附细胞微观性能之间关系的见解。通过对支架进行宏观和微观的机械压缩测试和原子力显微镜实验特性化来验证 FE 模型。结果,首次可以预测这些非平凡支架结构的所谓细胞有效刚度。发现宏观支架刚度和细胞有效刚度之间存在线性关系,后者始终高出 6.4±0.6 倍。在体外证实了细胞有效刚度在控制祖细胞分化中的相关性。获得的关于细胞有效刚度的信息对于组织再生的早期阶段特别重要,因为细胞最初会填充和与生物材料相互作用。除了这里研究的特定生物材料外,所介绍的方法还可以转移到其他复杂的生物材料结构中。基于对细胞提供的机械环境的更深入理解的 3D 大孔支架的设计优化将有助于增强基于生物材料的组织再生方法。