Issue 17, 2013

Biocompatibility evaluation of electrically conductive nanofibrous scaffolds for cardiac tissue engineering

Abstract

Myocardial tissue engineering offers a novel technology to improve or regenerate cardiac functions using a combination of cells, biomaterials and engineering strategies. Inspired by low-resistance pathways for electrical signal propagation in the native heart tissue, electrically conductive nanofibrous scaffolds composed of melanin, poly(L-lactide-co-ε-caprolactone) and gelatin were fabricated to provide electrophysiological cues to cardiac myocytes and mimic the native myocardial environment. Our results show that by increasing the concentration of melanin to 40% within the composite, the fiber diameters reduced to 153 ± 30 nm, modulus decreased to 7.1 ± 0.6 MPa, and conductance increased to 259.51 ± 187.60 μS cm−1. Results of cell proliferation and immunostaining analysis of human cardiac myocytes demonstrated that the conductive nanofibers containing 10% melanin promote cell interaction with expression of cardiac-specific proteins compared to other scaffolds. Electrical stimulation through the scaffolds showed enhanced cell proliferation and the expression of connexin-43, signifying the potential of using melanin containing nanofibers as a suitable cardiac patch for the regeneration of infarct myocardium.

Graphical abstract: Biocompatibility evaluation of electrically conductive nanofibrous scaffolds for cardiac tissue engineering

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 Sep 2012
Accepted
05 Mar 2013
First published
05 Mar 2013

J. Mater. Chem. B, 2013,1, 2305-2314

Biocompatibility evaluation of electrically conductive nanofibrous scaffolds for cardiac tissue engineering

D. Kai, M. P. Prabhakaran, G. Jin and S. Ramakrishna, J. Mater. Chem. B, 2013, 1, 2305 DOI: 10.1039/C3TB00151B

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