posted on 2024-11-13, 01:17authored byXuechen Zhang, Nicola Contessi Negrini, Rita Correia, Paul T. Sharpe, Adam D. Celiz, Ana Angelova Volponi
Generating teeth in vitro requires mimicking
tooth
developmental processes. Biomaterials are essential to support 3D
tooth organoid formation, but their properties must be finely tuned
to achieve the required biomimicry for tooth development. For the
first time, we used bioorthogonally cross-linked hydrogels as defined
3D matrixes for tooth developmental engineering, and we highlighted
how their properties play a pivotal role in enabling 3D tooth organoid
formation in vitro. We prepared hydrogels by mixing
gelatin precursors modified either with tetrazine (Tz) or norbornene
(Nb) moieties. We tuned the hydrogel properties (E = 2–7 kPa; G′ = 500–1500 Pa)
by varying the gelatin concentration (8% vs 12% w/V) and stoichiometric
ratio (Tz:Nb = 1 vs 0.5). We encapsulated dental epithelial-mesenchymal
cell pellets in a library of hydrogels and identified a hydrogel formulation
that enabled successful growth kinetics and morphogenesis of tooth
germs, introducing a defined tunable platform for tooth organoid engineering
and modeling.