Abstract
Poly(N-substituted α/β-asparagine) was evaluated as a thermoresponsible and an injectable scaffold for cartilage regeneration. Solutions of this polymer are liquid state below 25°C and nonfluid hydrogel above 35°C, allowing an aqueous solution containing cells at room temperature to form a hydrogel with encapsulated cells at physiological body temperature. Chondrocytes were isolated from joint of 4-week-old Japanese white rabbits, dispersed within the thermoresponsive polymer solution and maintained for up to 72 hours in vitro. The polymer solutions demonstrated concentration-dependent inhibitory effect on chondrocytes multiplication. After the three-day cultivation, the survival rate of the chondrocytes fell into a 70∼90% ranges among all the tested polymer concentrations. The morphology studies showed that there were some physical and/or chemical stress leading cells to necrosis and some extent apoptosis. Some physical and/or chemical stress may be applied, and over 70% of the chondrocytes could survive through the stress, suggesting that some phenotype could have been selected from the heterogeneous mixture of chondrocytes.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
