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Electron Beam-Treated Enzymatically Mineralized Gelatin Hydrogels for Bone Tissue Engineering

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Electron Beam-Treated Enzymatically Mineralized Gelatin Hydrogels for Bone Tissue Engineering. / Riedel, Stefanie; Ward, Danny; Kudlackova, Radmila et al.
In: Journal of Functional Biomaterials, Vol. 12, No. 4, 08.10.2021, p. 1-17.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Riedel, S, Ward, D, Kudlackova, R, Mazur, K, Bačáková, L, Kerns, J, Allinson, S, Ashton, L, Koniezcny, R, Mayr, S & Douglas, T 2021, 'Electron Beam-Treated Enzymatically Mineralized Gelatin Hydrogels for Bone Tissue Engineering', Journal of Functional Biomaterials, vol. 12, no. 4, pp. 1-17. https://doi.org/10.3390/jfb12040057

APA

Riedel, S., Ward, D., Kudlackova, R., Mazur, K., Bačáková, L., Kerns, J., Allinson, S., Ashton, L., Koniezcny, R., Mayr, S., & Douglas, T. (2021). Electron Beam-Treated Enzymatically Mineralized Gelatin Hydrogels for Bone Tissue Engineering. Journal of Functional Biomaterials, 12(4), 1-17. https://doi.org/10.3390/jfb12040057

Vancouver

Riedel S, Ward D, Kudlackova R, Mazur K, Bačáková L, Kerns J et al. Electron Beam-Treated Enzymatically Mineralized Gelatin Hydrogels for Bone Tissue Engineering. Journal of Functional Biomaterials. 2021 Oct 8;12(4):1-17. doi: 10.3390/jfb12040057

Author

Riedel, Stefanie ; Ward, Danny ; Kudlackova, Radmila et al. / Electron Beam-Treated Enzymatically Mineralized Gelatin Hydrogels for Bone Tissue Engineering. In: Journal of Functional Biomaterials. 2021 ; Vol. 12, No. 4. pp. 1-17.

Bibtex

@article{47a5d81f90424c60a3b9e43610fc20fb,
title = "Electron Beam-Treated Enzymatically Mineralized Gelatin Hydrogels for Bone Tissue Engineering",
abstract = "Biological hydrogels are highly promising materials for bone tissue engineering (BTE) due to their high biocompatibility and biomimetic characteristics. However, for advanced and customized BTE, precise tools for material stabilization and tuning material properties are desired while optimal mineralisation must be ensured. Therefore, reagent-free crosslinking techniques such as high energy electron beam treatment promise effective material modifications without formation of cytotoxic by-products. In the case of the hydrogel gelatin, electron beam crosslinking further induces thermal stability enabling biomedical application at physiological temperatures. In the case of enzymatic mineralisation, induced by Alkaline Phosphatase (ALP) and mediated by Calcium Glycerophosphate (CaGP), it is necessary to investigate if electron beam treatment before mineralisation has an influence on the enzymatic activity and thus affects the mineralisation process. The presented study investigates electron beam-treated gelatin hydrogels with previously incorporated ALP and successive mineralisation via incubation in a medium containing CaGP. It could be shown that electron beam treatment optimally maintains enzymatic activity of ALP which allows mineralisation. Furthermore, the precise tuning of material properties such as increasing compressive modulus is possible. This study characterizes the mineralised hydrogels in terms of mineral formation and demonstrates the formation of CaP in dependence of ALP concentration and electron dose. Furthermore, investigations of uniaxial compression stability indicate increased compression moduli for mineralised electron beam-treated gelatin hydrogels. In summary, electron beam-treated mineralized gelatin hydrogels reveal good cytocompatibility for MG-63 osteoblast like cells indicating a high potential for BTE applications.",
author = "Stefanie Riedel and Danny Ward and Radmila Kudlackova and Karolina Mazur and Lucie Ba{\v c}{\'a}kov{\'a} and Jemma Kerns and Sarah Allinson and Lorna Ashton and Robert Koniezcny and Stefan Mayr and Timothy Douglas",
year = "2021",
month = oct,
day = "8",
doi = "10.3390/jfb12040057",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "1--17",
journal = "Journal of Functional Biomaterials",
issn = "2079-4983",
publisher = "Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Electron Beam-Treated Enzymatically Mineralized Gelatin Hydrogels for Bone Tissue Engineering

AU - Riedel, Stefanie

AU - Ward, Danny

AU - Kudlackova, Radmila

AU - Mazur, Karolina

AU - Bačáková, Lucie

AU - Kerns, Jemma

AU - Allinson, Sarah

AU - Ashton, Lorna

AU - Koniezcny, Robert

AU - Mayr, Stefan

AU - Douglas, Timothy

PY - 2021/10/8

Y1 - 2021/10/8

N2 - Biological hydrogels are highly promising materials for bone tissue engineering (BTE) due to their high biocompatibility and biomimetic characteristics. However, for advanced and customized BTE, precise tools for material stabilization and tuning material properties are desired while optimal mineralisation must be ensured. Therefore, reagent-free crosslinking techniques such as high energy electron beam treatment promise effective material modifications without formation of cytotoxic by-products. In the case of the hydrogel gelatin, electron beam crosslinking further induces thermal stability enabling biomedical application at physiological temperatures. In the case of enzymatic mineralisation, induced by Alkaline Phosphatase (ALP) and mediated by Calcium Glycerophosphate (CaGP), it is necessary to investigate if electron beam treatment before mineralisation has an influence on the enzymatic activity and thus affects the mineralisation process. The presented study investigates electron beam-treated gelatin hydrogels with previously incorporated ALP and successive mineralisation via incubation in a medium containing CaGP. It could be shown that electron beam treatment optimally maintains enzymatic activity of ALP which allows mineralisation. Furthermore, the precise tuning of material properties such as increasing compressive modulus is possible. This study characterizes the mineralised hydrogels in terms of mineral formation and demonstrates the formation of CaP in dependence of ALP concentration and electron dose. Furthermore, investigations of uniaxial compression stability indicate increased compression moduli for mineralised electron beam-treated gelatin hydrogels. In summary, electron beam-treated mineralized gelatin hydrogels reveal good cytocompatibility for MG-63 osteoblast like cells indicating a high potential for BTE applications.

AB - Biological hydrogels are highly promising materials for bone tissue engineering (BTE) due to their high biocompatibility and biomimetic characteristics. However, for advanced and customized BTE, precise tools for material stabilization and tuning material properties are desired while optimal mineralisation must be ensured. Therefore, reagent-free crosslinking techniques such as high energy electron beam treatment promise effective material modifications without formation of cytotoxic by-products. In the case of the hydrogel gelatin, electron beam crosslinking further induces thermal stability enabling biomedical application at physiological temperatures. In the case of enzymatic mineralisation, induced by Alkaline Phosphatase (ALP) and mediated by Calcium Glycerophosphate (CaGP), it is necessary to investigate if electron beam treatment before mineralisation has an influence on the enzymatic activity and thus affects the mineralisation process. The presented study investigates electron beam-treated gelatin hydrogels with previously incorporated ALP and successive mineralisation via incubation in a medium containing CaGP. It could be shown that electron beam treatment optimally maintains enzymatic activity of ALP which allows mineralisation. Furthermore, the precise tuning of material properties such as increasing compressive modulus is possible. This study characterizes the mineralised hydrogels in terms of mineral formation and demonstrates the formation of CaP in dependence of ALP concentration and electron dose. Furthermore, investigations of uniaxial compression stability indicate increased compression moduli for mineralised electron beam-treated gelatin hydrogels. In summary, electron beam-treated mineralized gelatin hydrogels reveal good cytocompatibility for MG-63 osteoblast like cells indicating a high potential for BTE applications.

U2 - 10.3390/jfb12040057

DO - 10.3390/jfb12040057

M3 - Journal article

VL - 12

SP - 1

EP - 17

JO - Journal of Functional Biomaterials

JF - Journal of Functional Biomaterials

SN - 2079-4983

IS - 4

ER -