Issue 23, 2019, Issue in Progress

Synthesis and characterization of photocrosslinkable hydrogels from bovine skin gelatin

Abstract

Hydrogels that mimic native tissues chemically and structurally have been increasingly sought for a wide variety of tissue engineering applications. Gelatin can be naturally derived from different sources and functionalized to fabricate hydrogels that exhibit high cytocompatibility and favorable biodegradable properties. The amino groups on the gelatin backbone can be substituted by adding varying proportions of methacrylic anhydride (MAA) to create biomimetic hydrogels which can be used as tissue engineering scaffolds. Gelatin from different sources yields hydrogels with distinctive physical, chemical, and biological properties. In this work, gelatin from bovine skin was used to fabricate hydrogels with varying degrees of crosslinking content using 1, 4, 7, and 10 mL MAA. The material properties of these hydrogels were characterized. The cytocompatibility of the gelatin-based hydrogels was studied using L6 rat myoblasts. The hydrogels from bovine skin gelatin exhibit mechanical properties that are conducive for applications which require substrates to propagate cell growth, migration, and proliferation rapidly. These hydrogels exhibit exceptional tunability behavior which makes them useful and applicable to culture different cell types.

Graphical abstract: Synthesis and characterization of photocrosslinkable hydrogels from bovine skin gelatin

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
25 Jan 2019
Accepted
21 Apr 2019
First published
29 Apr 2019
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Adv., 2019,9, 13016-13025

Synthesis and characterization of photocrosslinkable hydrogels from bovine skin gelatin

S. Suvarnapathaki, M. A. Nguyen, X. Wu, S. P. Nukavarapu and G. Camci-Unal, RSC Adv., 2019, 9, 13016 DOI: 10.1039/C9RA00655A

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