Aminosilane Functionalized Aligned Fiber PCL Scaffolds for Peripheral Nerve Repair

Author:

Taylor Caroline S.1ORCID,Barnes Joseph2,Prasad Koduri Manohar2ORCID,Haq Shamsal3,Gregory David A.1ORCID,Roy Ipsita1ORCID,D'Sa Raechelle A.2ORCID,Curran Judith2ORCID,Haycock John W.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Materials Science & Engineering, Kroto Research Institute Broad Lane Sheffield S3 7HQ UK

2. Department of Mechanical, Materials and Aerospace, School of Engineering University of Liverpool Harrison Hughes Building Liverpool L69 3GH UK

3. Department of Chemistry University of Liverpool Crown Street Liverpool L69 7ZD UK

Abstract

AbstractSilane modification is a simple and cost‐effective tool to modify existing biomaterials for tissue engineering applications. Aminosilane layer deposition has previously been shown to control NG108‐15 neuronal cell and primary Schwann cell adhesion and differentiation by controlling deposition of ─NH2 groups at the submicron scale across the entirety of a surface by varying silane chain length. This is the first study toreport depositing 11‐aminoundecyltriethoxysilane (CL11) onto aligned Polycaprolactone (PCL) scaffolds for peripheral nerve regeneration. Fibers are manufactured via electrospinning and characterized using water contact angle measurements, atomic force microscopy (AFM), and X‐ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). Confirmed modified fibers are investigated using in vitro cell culture of NG108‐15 neuronal cells and primary Schwann cells to determine cell viability, cell differentiation, and phenotype. CL11‐modified fibers significantly support NG108‐15 neuronal cell and Schwann cell viability. NG108‐15 neuronal cell differentiation maintains Schwann cell phenotype compared to unmodified PCL fiber scaffolds. 3D ex vivo culture of Dorsal root ganglion explants (DRGs) confirms further Schwann cell migration and longer neurite outgrowth from DRG explants cultured on CL11 fiber scaffolds compared to unmodified scaffolds. Thus, a reproducible and cost‐effective tool is reported to modify biomaterials with functional amine groups that can significantly improve nerve guidance devices and enhance nerve regeneration.

Funder

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Materials Chemistry,Polymers and Plastics,Biomaterials,Bioengineering,Biotechnology

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