Research Specifications

Home \Development of novel ...
Title
Development of novel electrically conductive scaffold based on hyperbranched polyester and polythiophene for tissue engineering applications
Type of Research Article
Keywords
polythiophene, electrospinning, conducting scaffold, biocompatibility, tissue engineering
Abstract
Abstract: A novel electrically conductive scaffold containing hyperbranched aliphatic polyester (HAP), polythiophene (PTh), and poly(e-caprolactone) (PCL) for regenerative medicine application was succesfully fabricated via electrospinning technique. For this purpose, the HAP (G4; fourth generation) was synthesized via melt polycondensation reaction from tris(methylol)propane and 2,2-bis(methylol) propionic acid (bis-MPA). Afterward, the synthesized HAP was functionalized with 2-thiopheneacetic acid in the presence of N,N-dicyclohexyl carbodiimide, and N-hydroxysuccinimide as coupling agent and catalyst, respectively, to afford a thiophene-functionalized G4 macromonomer. This macromonomer was subsequently used in chemical oxidation copolymerization with thiophene monomer to produce a starshaped PTh with G4 core (G4-PTh). The solution of the G4-PTh, and PCL was electrospun to produce uniform, conductive, and biocompatible nanofibers. The conductivity, hydrophilicity, and mechanical properties of these nanofibers were investigated. The biocompatibility of the electrospun nanofibers were evaluated by assessing the adhesion and proliferation of mouse osteoblast MC3T3-E1 cell line and in vitro degradability to demonstrate their potential uses as a tissue engineering scaffold.
Researchers Mehdi Jaymand (First Researcher)، Raana Sarvari (Second Researcher)، Parisa Abbaszadeh (Third Researcher)، Bakhshali Massoumi (Fourth Researcher)، Morteza Eskandari (Fifth Researcher)، Younes Beygi khosrowshahi (Not In First Six Researchers)