posted on 2020-02-06, 09:29authored byTitouan Montheil, Marie Maumus, Laurine Valot, Aurélien Lebrun, Jean Martinez, Muriel Amblard, Danièle Noël, Ahmad Mehdi, Gilles Subra
An inorganic sol–gel polymerization
process was used as
a cross-linking reaction during three-dimensional (3D) bioprinting
of cell-containing hydrogel scaffolds. Hybrid hydroxypropyl methyl
cellulose (HPMC), with a controlled ratio of silylation, was prepared
and isolated as a 3D-network precursor. When dissolved in a biological
buffer containing human mesenchymal stem cells, it yields a bioink
that can be printed during polymerization by extrusion. It is worth
noting that the sol–gel process proceeded at pH 7.4 using biocompatible
mode of catalysis (NaF and glycine). The printing window was determined
by rheology and viscosity measurements. The physicochemical properties
of hydrogels were studied. Covalent functionalization of the network
can be easily performed by adding a triethoxysilyl-containing molecule;
a fluorescent hybrid molecule was used as a proof of concept.