Interface tissue repair requires the construction of biomaterials with integrated structures of multiple protein types. Hydrogels that modulate internal porous structures provide a 3D microenvironment for encapsulated cells, making them promise for interface tissue repair. Currently, reduction of intrinsic immunogenicity and increase of bioactive extracellular matrix (ECM) secretion are issues to be considered in these materials. In this study, gelatin methacrylate (GelMA) hydrogel is used to encapsulate chondrocytes and construct a phase transition 3D cell culture system (PTCC) by utilizing the thermosensitivity of gelatin microspheres to create micropores within the hydrogel. The types of bioactive extracellular matrix protein formation by chondrocytes encapsulated in hydrogels are investigated in vitro. After 28 days of culture, GelMA PTCC forms an extracellular matrix predominantly composed of collagen type II, collagen type I, and fibronectin. After decellularization, the protein types and mechanical properties are well preserved, fabricating a decellularized tissue-engineered extracellular matrix and GelMA hydrogel interpenetrating network hydrogel (dECM-GelMA IPN) consisting of GelMA hydrogel as the first-level network and the ECM secreted by chondrocytes as the second-level network. This material has the potential to mediate the repair and regeneration of tendon-bone interface tissues with multiple protein types.
Keywords: 3D cell culture; extracellular matrix; hydrogel; interface defect repair; interpenetrating network.
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