University of Wollongong
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FLASH: Fluorescently LAbelled Sensitive Hydrogel to monitor bioscaffolds degradation during neocartilage generation

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-17, 16:18 authored by Carmine Onofrillo, Serena Duchi, Sam Francis, Cathal D O'Connell, Lilith M Caballero Aguilar, Stephanie Doyle, Zhilian Yue, Gordon G Wallace, Peter F Choong, Claudia Di Bella
Regenerative therapies based on photocrosslinkable hydrogels and stem cells are of growing interest in the field of cartilage repair. Cell-mediated degradation is critical for the successful clinical translation of implanted hydrogels. However, characterising cell-mediated degradation, while simultaneously monitoring the deposition of a distinct new matrix, remains a major challenge. In this study we generated a Fluorescently LAbelled Sensitive Hydrogel (FLASH) to correlate the degradation of a hydrogel bioscaffold with neocartilage formation. Gelatine Methacryloyl (GelMA) was covalently bound to the FITC fluorophore to generate FLASH and bioscaffolds were produced by casting different concentrations of FLASH GelMA, with and without human adipose-derived stem cells (hADSCs) undergoing chondrogenesis. The loss of fluorescence from FLASH bioscaffolds was correlated with changes in mechanical properties, expression of chondrogenic markers and accumulation of a cartilaginous extracellular matrix. The ability of the system to be used as a sensor to monitor bioscaffold degradability during chondrogenesis was evaluated in vitro, in a human ex vivo model of cartilage repair and in a full chondral defect in vivo rabbit model. This study represents a step towards the generation of a high throughput monitoring system to evaluate de novo cartilage formation in tissue engineering therapies.

Funding

Royal Australasian College of Surgeons (PG258)

History

Journal title

Biomaterials

Volume

264

Language

English

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