Abstract
Functional regeneration of anisotropically aligned tissues such as ligaments, microvascular networks, myocardium, or skeletal muscle requires a temporal and spatial series of biochemical and biophysical cues to direct cell functions that promote native tissue regeneration. When these cues are lost during traumatic injuries such as volumetric muscle loss (VML), scar formation occurs, limiting the regenerative capacity of the tissue. Currently, autologous tissue transfer is the gold standard for treating injuries such as VML but can result in adverse outcomes including graft failure, donor site morbidity, and excessive scarring. Tissue-engineered scaffolds composed of biomaterials, cells, or both have been investigated to promote functional tissue regeneration but are still limited by inadequate tissue ingrowth. These scaffolds should provide precisely tuned topographies and stiffnesses using proregenerative materials to encourage tissue-specific functions such as myoblast orientation, followed by aligned myotube formation and recovery of functional contraction. In this study, we describe the design and characterization of novel porous fibrin scaffolds with anisotropic microarchitectural features that recapitulate the native tissue microenvironment and offer a promising approach for regeneration of aligned tissues. We used directional freeze-casting with varied fibrin concentrations and freezing temperatures to produce scaffolds with tunable degrees of anisotropy and strut widths. Nanoindentation analyses showed that the moduli of our fibrin scaffolds varied as a function of fibrin concentration and were consistent with native skeletal muscle tissue. Quantitative morphometric analyses of myoblast cytoskeletons on scaffold microarchitectures demonstrated enhanced cell alignment as a function of microarchitectural morphology. The ability to precisely control the anisotropic features of fibrin scaffolds promises to provide a powerful tool for directing aligned tissue ingrowth and enhance functional regeneration of tissues such as skeletal muscle.
Impact Statement
There remains a significant need to create implantable porous scaffolds that promote the ingrowth of aligned cells such as myoblasts that enhance the formation of myotubes as well as the rate of functional muscle regeneration. Toward this objective, our laboratory developed novel porous fibrin scaffolds with tunable anisotropic microarchitectural features that mimic the biochemical and biophysical signaling cues in native skeletal muscle matrices to direct preferential cellular orientation. Our findings suggest that the precise alterations of scaffold microtopography and substrate stiffness will provide an impactful design strategy for promoting the regeneration of tissues such as contractile skeletal muscle.
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