Melt Electrowriting of Elastic Scaffolds Using PEOT-PBT Multi-block Copolymer

Armin Amirsadeghi, Pavan Kumar Reddy Gudeti, Sietse Tock, Marcus Koch, Daniele Parisi, Marleen Kamperman, Małgorzata Katarzyna Włodarczyk-Biegun*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)
29 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Melt electrowriting (MEW) is a powerful additive manufacturing technique to produce tissue engineering scaffolds. Despite its strength, it is limited by a small number of processable polymers. Therefore, to broaden the library of materials for MEW, we investigated the printability of poly(ethylene oxide terephthalate)-poly(butylene terephthalate) (PEOT-PBT), a thermoplastic elastomer. The effect of different printing parameters and material thermal degradation are studied. It is observed that the material is stable for >60 min at a printing temperature of 195 °C in a nitrogen environment. Next, two types of designs are printed and characterized: mesh-like and semi-random scaffolds. For both types of designs, PEOT-PBT scaffolds reveal a higher yield strain, and lower Young's modulus as compared to control polycaprolactone scaffolds. Biological studies performed using mouse embryonic fibroblasts (NIH-3T3) show good cell viability and metabolic activity on all print scaffolds. SEM imaging reveals actively migrating cells on PEOT-PBT mesh scaffolds after 24 h of culture and 98.87% of pore bridging by cells after 28 days of culture. Immunofluorescence staining shows decreased expression of alpha-smooth muscle actin from day 14 to day 28 in PEOT-PBT mesh scaffolds. Overall, it is shown that melt electrowritten PEOT-PBT scaffolds have great potential for soft tissue regeneration.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2402914
Number of pages17
JournalAdvanced healthcare materials
Volume14
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 27-Jan-2024

Keywords

  • 3D printing
  • fibroblasts
  • melt electrowritten scaffolds
  • thermoplastic elastomer
  • tissue engineering

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