posted on 2019-02-21, 00:00authored byShixuan Chen, Hongjun Wang, Alec McCarthy, Zheng Yan, Hyung Joon Kim, Mark A. Carlson, Younan Xia, Jingwei Xie
Assembling
electrospun nanofibers with controlled alignment into
three-dimensional (3D), complex, and predesigned shapes has proven
to be a difficult task for regenerative medicine. Herein, we report
a novel approach inspired by solids of revolution that transforms
two-dimensional (2D) nanofiber mats of a controlled thickness into
once-inaccessible 3D objects with predesigned shapes. The 3D objects
are highly porous, consisting of layers of aligned nanofibers separated
by gaps ranging from several micrometers to several millimeters. Upon
compression, the objects are able to recover their original shapes.
The porous objects can serve as scaffolds, guiding the organization
of cells and producing highly ordered 3D tissue constructs. Additionally,
subcutaneous implantation in rats demonstrates that the 3D objects
enable rapid cell penetration, new blood vessel formation, and collagen
matrix deposition. This new class of 3D hierarchical nanofiber architectures
offers promising advancements in both in vitro engineering of complex
3D tissue constructs/models or organs and in vivo tissue repair and
regeneration.