A Versatile Biosynthetic Hydrogel Platform for Engineering of Tissue Analogues

Publication date

2019-10

Authors

Klotz, Barbara J.ISNI 0000000509527877
Oosterhoff, Loes AISNI 0000000492915100
Utomo, LizetteORCID 0000-0003-2214-2344ISNI 0000000493069233
Lim, Khoon S
Vallmajo-Martin, Queralt
Clevers, HansISNI 0000000043961208
Woodfield, Tim B F
Rosenberg, Antoine J W P
Malda, JosORCID 0000-0002-9241-7676ISNI 0000000388144393
Ehrbar, Martin

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

For creating functional tissue analogues in tissue engineering, stem cells require very specific 3D microenvironments to thrive and mature. Demanding (stem) cell types that are used nowadays can find such an environment in a heterogeneous protein mixture with the trade name Matrigel. Several variations of synthetic hydrogel platforms composed of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG), which are spiked with peptides, have been recently developed and shown equivalence to Matrigel for stem cell differentiation. Here a clinically relevant hydrogel platform, based on PEG and gelatin, which even outperforms Matrigel when targeting 3D prevascularized bone and liver organoid tissue engineering models is presented. The hybrid hydrogel with natural and synthetic components stimulates efficient cell differentiation, superior to Matrigel models. Furthermore, the strength of this hydrogel lies in the option to covalently incorporate unmodified proteins. These results demonstrate how a hybrid hydrogel platform with intermediate biological complexity, when compared to existing biological materials and synthetic PEG-peptide approaches, can efficiently support tissue development from human primary cells.

Keywords

FXIII, gelatin, liver organoids, matrigel, osteogenesis, polyethylene glycol, vasculogenesis

Citation

Klotz, B J, Oosterhoff, L A, Utomo, L, Lim, K S, Vallmajo-Martin, Q, Clevers, H, Woodfield, T B F, Rosenberg, A J W P, Malda, J, Ehrbar, M, Spee, B & Gawlitta, D 2019, 'A Versatile Biosynthetic Hydrogel Platform for Engineering of Tissue Analogues', Advanced healthcare materials, vol. 2019, no. 8, e1900979. https://doi.org/10.1002/adhm.201900979