Artigo Revisado por pares

Cytocompatibility of calf pericardium treated by glutaraldehyde and by the acyl azide methods in an organotypic culture model

1995; Elsevier BV; Volume: 16; Issue: 13 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/0142-9612(95)94908-4

ISSN

1878-5905

Autores

Hervé Petite, Jean-Luc Duval, V. Frei, Nabil Abdul-Malak, M. F. Sigot‐Luizard, D. Herbage,

Tópico(s)

3D Printing in Biomedical Research

Resumo

Glutaraldehyde (GTA) is used to cross-link collagen-based biomaterials, but these materials are often cytotoxic. In order to overcome this problem, we have proposed the use of the acyl azide methods with either hydrazine or diphenylphosphoryl azide (DPPA) as reagents. In this paper we determine the cytocompatibility of acyl azide- and GTA-treated pericardium in vitro, by an organotypic chick aorta culture technique developed for the evaluation of the propensity of vascular cells (both endothelial and smooth muscle cells) to migrate and grow on the surface of biomaterials. We first examined pericardium stabilization as a function of GTA concentration and time, so that we could minimize residual GTA molecules in the material. Treatment for 72 h with 0.05% GTA was optimal for thermal stabilization of the pericardium with a denaturation temperature (Td) of 86.8 °C, providing similar results to treatment with 0.6% GTA for 4 h (Td = 85.1 °C). Pericardium treated in this way was, however, poorly cytocompatible with little vascular cell migration and growth when compared with tissues treated by the acyl azide methods. The best results were obtained with 0.5% DPPA; treated tissues showed a high level of cross-linking (Td = 82.4 °C) and three-fold increases in cell growth and migration over those in a non-toxic control.

Referência(s)
Altmetric
PlumX