Large-scale skin injuries are usually accompanied by impaired wound healing, resulting in scar formation, or significant morbidity and mortality. The aim of this study is to explore the in vivo application of 3D-printed tissue-engineered skin substitute using innovative biomaterial loaded with human adipose-derived stem cells (hADSCs) in wound healing. Adipose tissue was decellularized, and extracellular matrix components were lyophilized and solubilized to obtain adipose tissue decellularized extracellular matrix (dECM) pre-gel. The newly designed biomaterial is composed of adipose tissue dECM pre-gel, methacrylated gelatin (GelMA), and methacrylated hyaluronic acid (HAMA). Rheological measurement was performed to evaluate the phase-transition temperature and the storage and loss modulus at this temperature. Tissue-engineered skin substitute loaded with hADSCs was fabricated by 3D printing. We used nude mice to establish full-thickness skin wound healing model and divided them into four groups randomly: (A) Full-thickness skin graft treatment group, (B) 3D-bioprinted skin substitute treatment group as the experimental group, (C) microskin graft treatment group, and (D) control group. The amount of DNA in each milligram of dECM was 24.5 ± 7.1 ng, fulfilling the currently accepted decellularization criteria. The solubilized adipose tissue dECM was thermo-sensitive biomaterial and underwent a sol-gel phase transition when temperature rises. The dECM-GelMA-HAMA precursor undergoes a gel-sol phase transition at 17.5°C, where the storage and loss modulus of the precursor is about 8 Pa. The scanning electron microscope showed that the interior of crosslinked dECM-GelMA-HAMA hydrogel is 3D porous network structure with suitable porosity and pore size. The shape of the skin substitute is stable with regular grid-like scaffold structure. Wound healing in the experimented animals was accelerated after being treated with 3D-printed skin substitute, which attenuate inflammatory response, increase blood perfusion around the wound, as well as promote re-epithelialization, collagen deposition and alignment, and angiogenesis. In summary, 3D-printed dECM-GelMA-HAMA tissue-engineered skin substitute loaded with hADSCs, which can be fabricated by 3D printing, can accelerate wound healing and improve healing quality by promoting angiogenesis. The hADSCs and the stable 3D-printed stereoscopic grid-like scaffold structure play a critical role in promoting wound healing
CITATION STYLE
Fu, H., Zhang, D., Zeng, J., Fu, Q., Chen, Z., Sun, X., … Chen, M. (2022). Application of 3D-printed tissue-engineered skin substitute using innovative biomaterial loaded with human adipose-derived stem cells in wound healing. International Journal of Bioprinting, 9(2), 394–406. https://doi.org/10.18063/IJB.V9I2.674
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