Correlation between porosity and physicochemical and biological properties of electrospinning PLA/PVA membranes for skin regeneration

Biomater Adv. 2023 Sep:152:213506. doi: 10.1016/j.bioadv.2023.213506. Epub 2023 Jun 8.

Abstract

Electrospinning is an increasingly popular technique for obtaining scaffolds for skin regeneration. However, electrospun scaffolds may also have some disadvantages, as the densely packed fibers in the scaffold structure can limit the penetration of skin cells into the inner part of the material. Such a dense arrangement of fibers can cause the cells to treat the 3D material as 2D one, and thus cause them to accumulate only on the upper surface. In this study, bi-polymer scaffolds made of polylactide (PLA) and polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) electrospun in a sequential or a concurrent system were investigated in a different PLA:PVA ratio (2:1 and 1:1). The properties of six types of model materials were investigated and compared i.e.; the initial materials electrospun by the sequential (PLA/PVA, 2PLA/PVA) and the concurrent system (PLA||PVA) and the same materials with removed PVA fibers (PLA/rPVA, 2PLA/rPVA, PLA||rPVA). The fiber models were intended to increase the porosity and coherent structure parameters of the scaffolds. The applied treatment involving the removal of PVA nanofibers increased the size of interfibrous pores formed between the PLA fibers. Ultimately, the porosity of the PLA/PVA scaffolds increased from 78 % to 99 %, and the time of water absorption decreased from 516 to 2 s. The change in wettability was induced by a synergistic effect of decrease in roughness after washing out and the presence of residual PVA fibers. The chemical analysis carried out confirmed the presence of PVA residues on the PLA fibers (FTIR-ATR study). In vitro studies were performed on human keratinocytes (HaKaT) and macrophages (RAW264.7), for which penetration into the inner part of the PLAIIPVA scaffold was observed. The new proposed approach, which allows the removal of PVA fibers from the bicomponent material, allows to obtain a scaffold with increased porosity, and thus better permeability for cells and nutrients.

Keywords: Cells-materials interaction; Concurrent electrospinning; Porosity; Roughness; Sequential electrospinning; Skin regeneration; Wettability; Wound healing.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Polyesters*
  • Polyvinyl Alcohol* / chemistry
  • Porosity
  • Regeneration

Substances

  • Polyvinyl Alcohol
  • poly(lactide)
  • Polyesters