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Guided orientation of cardiomyocytes on electrospun aligned nanofibers for cardiac tissue engineering

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TLDR
The SEM and immunocytochemical analysis showed that the aligned PG scaffold greatly promoted cell attachment and alignment because of the biological components and ordered topography of the scaffolds, which concluded that thealigned PG nanofibrous scaffolds could be more promising substrates suitable for the regeneration of infarct myocardium and other cardiac defects.
Abstract
Cardiac tissue engineering (TE) is one of the most promising strategies to reconstruct the infarct myocardium and the major challenge involves producing a bioactive scaffold with anisotropic properties that assist in cell guidance to mimic the heart tissue. In this study, random and aligned poly(e-caprolactone)/gelatin (PG) composite nanofibrous scaffolds were electrospun to structurally mimic the oriented extracellular matrix (ECM). Morphological, chemical and mechanical properties of the electrospun PG nanofibers were evaluated by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), water contact angle, attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and tensile measurements. Results indicated that PG nanofibrous scaffolds possessed smaller fiber diameters (239 ± 37 nm for random fibers and 269 ± 33 nm for aligned fibers), increased hydrophilicity, and lower stiffness compared to electrospun PCL nanofibers. The aligned PG nanofibers showed anisotropic wetting characteristics and mechanical properties, which closely match the requirements of native cardiac anisotropy. Rabbit cardiomyocytes were cultured on electrospun random and aligned nanofibers to assess the biocompatibility of scaffolds, together with its potential for cell guidance. The SEM and immunocytochemical analysis showed that the aligned PG scaffold greatly promoted cell attachment and alignment because of the biological components and ordered topography of the scaffolds. Moreover, we concluded that the aligned PG nanofibrous scaffolds could be more promising substrates suitable for the regeneration of infarct myocardium and other cardiac defects. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part B: Appl Biomater, 2011.

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Journal ArticleDOI

CO2/Epoxide Coupling and the ROP of ε-Caprolactone: Mg and Al Complexes of γ-Phosphino-ketiminates as Dual-Purpose Catalysts

TL;DR: In this paper, deprotonated ketimines with PPh2Cl were synthesized by treating deproptonated kimine with PPH2Cl and showed high catalytic activity in the synthesis of cyclic carbonates from CO2 and epoxides and also in the ring opening polymerization (ROP) of e-caprolactone.
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Conductive biomaterials in cardiac tissue engineering

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TL;DR: This review summarized the fabrication of various conductive biomaterials for cardiac tissue engineering, and discussed the interaction between the conductives and the cells [cardiomyocytes (CMs) and stem cells].
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Optimizing Anisotropic Polyurethane Scaffolds to Mechanically Match with Native Myocardium

TL;DR: This biohybrid scaffold with biomimetic mechanics and good tissue compatibility would have great potential to be applied as a biodegradable acellular cardiac patch for myocardial infarction treatment.
Book ChapterDOI

Polyurethanes for cardiac applications

TL;DR: Biodegradable polyurethanes are required in the design of materials for cardiac tissue engineering because in the latest generation of cardiac devices, biomimetic strategies have been attractive in overcoming problems related to inadequate biointegration.
BookDOI

Porous lightweight composites reinforced with fibrous structures

TL;DR: Yang et al. as discussed by the authors reviewed the synthesis of dry-processable multi-walled carbon nanotubes and the processing and properties of their composites and compared with the composites produced by wet-solution-processed CNTs.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Electrospinning of polymeric nanofibers for tissue engineering applications: a review.

TL;DR: Electrospinning is examined by providing a brief description of the theory behind the process, examining the effect of changing the process parameters on fiber morphology, and discussing the potential applications and impacts of electrospinning on the field of tissue engineering.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electrospinning of nano/micro scale poly(L-lactic acid) aligned fibers and their potential in neural tissue engineering.

TL;DR: The aligned nanofibrous PLLA scaffold could be used as a potential cell carrier in neural tissue engineering after being evaluated in vitro using neural stem cells as a model cell line.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electrospun poly(epsilon-caprolactone)/gelatin nanofibrous scaffolds for nerve tissue engineering.

TL;DR: PCL/gelatin 70:30 nanofiber was found to exhibit the most balanced properties to meet all the required specifications for nerve tissue and was used for in vitro culture of nerve stem cells and proved to be a promising biomaterial suitable for nerve regeneration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluation of electrospun PCL/gelatin nanofibrous scaffold for wound healing and layered dermal reconstitution.

TL;DR: This study proposes a cost-effective composite consisting of a nanofibrous scaffold directly electrospun onto a polyurethane dressing (Tegaderm, 3M Medical) - which it is called the Tegaderm-nanofiber (TG-NF) construct - for dermal wound healing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Accordion-like honeycombs for tissue engineering of cardiac anisotropy.

TL;DR: Accordion-like honeycombs can overcome principal structural-mechanical limitations of previous scaffolds, promoting the formation of grafts with aligned heart cells and mechanical properties more closely resembling native myocardium.
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