Poly-l-Lactic Acid Nanofiber-Polyamidoamine Hydrogel Composites: Preparation, Properties, and Preliminary Evaluation as Scaffolds for Human Pluripotent Stem Cell Culturing

Macromol Biosci. 2016 Oct;16(10):1533-1544. doi: 10.1002/mabi.201600061. Epub 2016 Jun 10.

Abstract

Electrospun poly-l-lactic acid (PLLA) nanofiber mats carrying surface amine groups, previously introduced by nitrogen atmospheric pressure nonequilibrium plasma, are embedded into aqueous solutions of oligomeric acrylamide-end capped AGMA1, a biocompatible polyamidoamine with arg-gly-asp (RGD)-reminiscent repeating units. The resultant mixture is finally cured giving PLLA-AGMA1 hydrogel composites that absorb large amounts of water and, in the swollen state, are translucent, soft, and pliable, yet as strong as the parent PLLA mat. They do not split apart from each other when swollen in water and remain highly flexible and resistant, since the hydrogel portion is covalently grafted onto the PLLA nanofibers via the addition reaction of the surface amine groups to a part of the terminal acrylic double bonds of AGMA1 oligomers. Preliminary tested as scaffolds, the composites prove capable of maintaining short-term undifferentiated cultures of human pluripotent stem cells in feeder-free conditions.

Keywords: atmospheric pressure nonequilibrium plasma; electrospun poly-l-lactic nanofibers; human pluripotent stem cells; poly-l-lactic acid-AGMA1 hydrogel composites; polyamidoamines.

Publication types

  • Evaluation Study

MeSH terms

  • Agmatine / analogs & derivatives
  • Agmatine / chemistry
  • Cell Culture Techniques
  • Humans
  • Hydrogels / chemistry*
  • Nanofibers / chemistry*
  • Pluripotent Stem Cells / cytology
  • Pluripotent Stem Cells / metabolism*
  • Polyamines / chemistry*
  • Polyesters / chemistry*
  • Tissue Scaffolds / chemistry*

Substances

  • AGMA1 polymer
  • Hydrogels
  • Poly(amidoamine)
  • Polyamines
  • Polyesters
  • poly(lactide)
  • Agmatine