PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2020

Development of Scaffolds with Adjusted Stiffness for Mimicking Disease-Related Alterations of Liver Rigidity

Ruoß M, Rebholz S, et al.

Journal of Functional Biomaterials

Eberhard Karls University, Reutlingen University, University of Applied Sciences Esslingen

RESEARCH SUMMARY
Drug metabolism in patients with liver disease can differ substantially from healthy subjects, and clinical evidence links these changes to increased liver stiffness in fibrosis/cirrhosis. This study developed scaffold-based 3D liver culture models that mimic the stiffness of healthy versus fibrotic/cirrhotic liver to better capture stiffness-dependent changes in hepatic cell behavior relevant to drug testing. The authors fabricated porous pHEMA/BAA cryogel scaffolds with gelatin/collagen additives and screened compositions for pore architecture, permeability, swelling/water uptake, and stiffness. Two scaffold prototypes were selected to approximate healthy-liver rigidity (≈2.9 ± 1.3 kPa) and fibrotic/cirrhotic-like rigidity (stiffer prototypes), then used to culture HepG2 cells. Scaffold pre-incubation in FCS-containing medium strongly improved initial cell attachment, especially on the softer “healthy liver” scaffold, and SEM suggested surface deposits/agglomerates after pre-incubation contributed to improved adherence. Functionally, stiffness altered HepG2 metabolic enzyme activities: cells on softer scaffolds showed higher activity for key enzymes (including CYP3A4, CYP2C9, and UGT), while cells on the stiffer scaffold showed relatively higher CYP1A2 (and a trend toward higher GST). The work concludes that stiffness-tuned 3D scaffolds can model disease-related liver rigidity effects on drug metabolism and may improve prediction of drug behavior in fibrotic/cirrhotic livers compared with conventional 2D plastic culture.

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

MicroSquisher

Scaffold stiffness measurements were performed using a CellScale MicroSquisher microscale mechanical testing system to quantify compressive modulus of pHEMA/BAA cryogel scaffold prototypes under hydrated conditions. Scaffolds were stored in PBS to prevent dehydration prior to testing. Cylindrical samples (~3 mm height × ~2 mm diameter) were punched from each scaffold prototype and compressed uniaxially to 10% strain using a calibrated tungsten microbeam (0.558 mm diameter) fitted with a 3 mm × 3 mm square compression plate. The compression protocol applied 10% strain over 100 s, with a 2 s hold and 10 s recovery. MicroSquisher force–displacement output was used to compute nominal stress and strain, and an elastic modulus was calculated as E = σ/ε at the maximum nominal strain. These MicroSquisher-derived stiffness values were the key quantitative basis for selecting ‘healthy-liver-like’ versus ‘fibrotic-liver-like’ scaffold formulations used in subsequent HepG2 attachment and metabolic enzyme activity experiments.
AUTHORS

Marc Ruoß, Silas Rebholz, Marina Weimer, Carl Grom-Baumgarten, Kiriaki Athanasopulu, Ralf Kemkemer, Hanno Käß, Sabrina Ehnert, Andreas K. Nussler.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

Journal of Functional Biomaterials

YEAR

2020

INSTITUTIONS

Eberhard Karls University, Reutlingen University, University of Applied Sciences Esslingen

COUNTRIES

Germany

INSTRUMENT USED

MicroSquisher

TESTING METHODS

Compression TestingMicro-Mechanical Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

Drug Screening & Drug Delivery MechanicsFibrosis & Tissue RemodelingGastrointestinal and Urinary Tract BiomechanicsScaffold Mechanical Testing

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