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Download fileMicrofluidics-Assisted Fabrication of Gelatin-Silica Core–Shell Microgels for Injectable Tissue Constructs
journal contribution
posted on 2015-12-17, 00:12 authored by Chaenyung Cha, Jonghyun Oh, Keekyoung Kim, Yiling Qiu, Maria Joh, Su Ryon Shin, Xin Wang, Gulden Camci-Unal, Kai-tak Wan, Ronglih Liao, Ali KhademhosseiniMicrofabrication
technology provides a highly versatile platform for engineering hydrogels
used in biomedical applications with high-resolution control and injectability.
Herein, we present a strategy of microfluidics-assisted fabrication
photo-cross-linkable gelatin microgels, coupled with providing protective
silica hydrogel layer on the microgel surface to ultimately generate
gelatin-silica core–shell microgels for applications as in
vitro cell culture platform and injectable tissue constructs. A microfluidic
device having flow-focusing channel geometry was utilized to generate
droplets containing methacrylated gelatin (GelMA), followed by a photo-cross-linking
step to synthesize GelMA microgels. The size of the microgels could
easily be controlled by varying the ratio of flow rates of aqueous
and oil phases. Then, the GelMA microgels were used as in vitro cell
culture platform to grow cardiac side population cells on the microgel
surface. The cells readily adhered on the microgel surface and proliferated
over time while maintaining high viability (∼90%). The cells
on the microgels were also able to migrate to their surrounding area.
In addition, the microgels eventually degraded over time. These results
demonstrate that cell-seeded GelMA microgels have a great potential
as injectable tissue constructs. Furthermore, we demonstrated that
coating the cells on GelMA microgels with biocompatible and biodegradable
silica hydrogels via sol–gel method provided significant protection
against oxidative stress which is often encountered during and after
injection into host tissues, and detrimental to the cells. Overall,
the microfluidic approach to generate cell-adhesive microgel core,
coupled with silica hydrogels as a protective shell, will be highly
useful as a cell culture platform to generate a wide range of injectable
tissue constructs.