Pulsed electric field as a potential new method for microbial inactivation in scaffold materials for tissue engineering: the effect on collagen as a scaffold |
| |
Authors: | Smith Sharon Griffiths Sarah Macgregor Scott Beveridge Joe Anderson John van der Walle Chris Grant M Helen |
| |
Affiliation: | Bioengineering Unit, University of Strathclyde, Wolfson Centre, 106 Rottenrow, Glasgow G40NW, United Kingdom. |
| |
Abstract: | Hybrid scaffolds for tissue engineering are becoming increasingly complex through incorporation of biologically active biomacromolecules. There is a need to develop a compatible sterilization method that is capable of killing microorganisms, without adversely affecting the labile scaffold biomaterials or biomacromolecular components. Pulsed electric field (PEF) treatment has been successful as a nonthermal microbial inactivation-pasteurization method within the food industry. We have previously demonstrated that PEF treatment inactivates E. coli seeded in collagen gels. Here, we show that PEF treatment does not affect the structural integrity of the collagen molecule or its adsorption to polystyrene and hydroxyapatite surfaces. Moreover, osteoblast cells cultured on PEF-treated collagen, which was coated onto two- and three-dimensional scaffolds, retained their normal morphology, growth rate, and functionality. PEF treatment, therefore, shows great potential to be used as a sterilization method for collagen-based biomaterials. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|