JOURNAL ARTICLE

Three-Dimensional Biocompatible Ascorbic Acid-Containing Scaffold for Bone Tissue Engineering

Jian-Ying ZhangBruce DollEric J. BeckmanJeffrey O. Hollinger

Year: 2003 Journal:   Tissue Engineering Vol: 9 (6)Pages: 1143-1157   Publisher: Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.

Abstract

A biodegradable, biocompatible, ascorbic acid-containing three-dimensional polyurethane matrix was developed for bone tissue-engineering scaffolds. This matrix was synthesized with lysine-di-isocyanate (LDI), ascorbic acid (AA), glycerol, and polyethylene glycol (PEG). LDI-glycerol-PEG-AA prepolymer when reacted with water foamed with the liberation of CO(2) to provide a pliable, spongy urethane polymer with pore diameters of 100 to 500 microm. The LDI-glycerol-PEG-AA matrix degraded in aqueous solution and yielded lysine, glycerol, PEG, and ascorbic acid as breakdown products. The degradation products did not significantly affect the solution pH. The LDI-glycerol-PEG-AA matrix can be fabricated into diverse scaffold dimensions and the physicochemical properties of the polymer network supported in vitro cell growth. Green fluorescent protein-transgenic mouse bone marrow cells (GFP-MBMCs) attached to the polymer matrix and remained viable, and the cells became confluent cultures. Furthermore, ascorbic acid released from LDI-glycerol-PEG-AA matrix stimulated cell proliferation, type I collagen, and alkaline phosphatase synthesis in vitro. Cells grown on LDI-glycerol-PEG-AA matrix did not differ phenotypically from cells grown on tissue culture polystyrene plates as assessed by cell growth, expression of mRNA for collagen type I, and transforming growth factor beta(1). These observations suggest that AA-containing polyurethane may be useful in bone tissue-engineering applications.

Keywords:
Biocompatible material Ascorbic acid Scaffold Biomedical engineering Tissue engineering Chemistry Bone tissue Engineering Food science

Metrics

83
Cited By
5.88
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
35
Refs
0.97
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

3D Printing in Biomedical Research
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Graphene and Nanomaterials Applications
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Surgery

Related Documents

JOURNAL ARTICLE

A biodegradable polyurethane‐ascorbic acid scaffold for bone tissue engineering

Jianying ZhangBruce DollEric J. BeckmanJeffrey O. Hollinger

Journal:   Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A Year: 2003 Vol: 67A (2)Pages: 389-400
DISSERTATION

Three dimensional imaging of tissue engineering scaffold

A. Y. Abuelfilat

University:   OPAL (Open@LaTrobe) (La Trobe University) Year: 2017
BOOK-CHAPTER

Three-Dimensional Porous Scaffold of Hyaluronic Acid for Cartilage Tissue Engineering

Dae‐Duk KimDong‐Hwan KimYun-Jeong Son

Studies in mechanobiology, tissue engineering and biomaterials Year: 2010 Pages: 329-349
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.