PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2026

Nonmulberry Silk Fibroin Doping Boosts Charge Transfer and Charge Injection in Aligned Polypyrrole-Silk Scaffolds for Low-Voltage Neurostimulation

Borah R, Moses JC, et al.

Advanced Materials Interfaces

Trinity College Dublin, Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati, Institute of Advanced Study in Science & Technology, Dibrugarh University, Dakshin Kamrup College, National University of Ireland Galway

RESEARCH SUMMARY
This study developed aligned microfibrous electroconductive scaffolds for peripheral nerve repair by coating aligned Bombyx mori silk fibroin (BmSF) fiber mats with polypyrrole nanoparticles (PPy) and then functionalizing the surface with Antheraea assamensis silk fibroin (AaSF), a nonmulberry silk rich in RGD motifs. AaSF acted as a bioactive interface and a secondary anionic dopant that increased scaffold conductivity (reported ~9.18 mS cm−1), reduced charge-transfer resistance (reported as low as ~24 Ω in PBS), and increased charge storage capacity and charge/current injection under charge-balanced pulsing. In vitro, AaSF functionalization improved cytocompatibility and reduced macrophage inflammatory responses, enhanced neuronal/glial differentiation of porcine adipose-derived MSCs, and supported robust neurite extension from primary porcine dorsal root ganglion neurons under pulsed electrical stimulation—showing maximal neurite outgrowth at low stimulation amplitude (50 mV cm−1) with longest neurites reported near ~830 µm, while higher amplitudes reduced neurite outgrowth, underscoring the need for safe stimulation windows.

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

BioTester

A CellScale BioTester 5000 was used to quantify the transverse (fiber-perpendicular) mechanical cohesion of the aligned PPy:Silk mats—an axis that produces very low stresses (reported on the order of Pa) but is critical for handling, fixation, and use as a nerve guidance conduit. The authors performed transverse uniaxial stretch measurements under displacement-controlled step-hold-recovery protocols at defined strain levels (10–30% transverse strain). Force–time traces were recorded during the stretch phase, the stress-relaxation hold, and the recovery phase to evaluate load retention/relaxation behaviour, and peak force was extracted at 10%, 20%, and 30% transverse strain to compare lateral load-bearing capacity across Bm, PPyBm, and AaPPyBm scaffolds (with AaPPyBm showing the highest transverse peak forces).
AUTHORS

Rajiv Borah, Joseph Christakiran Moses, Jnanendra Upadhyay, Jitu Mani Das, Michael G. Monaghan, Biman B. Mandal.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

Advanced Materials Interfaces

YEAR

2026

INSTITUTIONS

Trinity College Dublin, Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati, Institute of Advanced Study in Science & Technology, Dibrugarh University, Dakshin Kamrup College, National University of Ireland Galway

COUNTRIES

India, Ireland

INSTRUMENT USED

BioTester

TESTING METHODS

Stress Relaxation TestingTensile TestingViscoelastic & Time-Dependent Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

Electroactive and Photothermal PolymersPeripheral Nerve Regeneration & PNS MechanicsScaffold Mechanical Testing

Related Publications:

Instrument Used:
Year:
Testing Method:
Research Application:
Country:

Nonmulberry Silk Fibroin Doping Boosts Charge Transfer and Charge Injection in Aligned Polypyrrole-Silk Scaffolds for Low-Voltage Neurostimulation

Borah R, Moses JC, et al.

Advanced Materials Interfaces

BioTester

Stress Relaxation TestingTensile TestingViscoelastic & Time-Dependent Testing

Electroactive and Photothermal PolymersPeripheral Nerve Regeneration & PNS MechanicsScaffold Mechanical Testing

2026

Nutrient deprivation of tendon-derived cells and its effect on collagen matrix integrity – mimicking graft remodelling after ACL reconstruction in vitro

Mansoor A K, Dekker S, et al.

Connective Tissue Research

BioTester

Tensile Testing

Musculoskeletal Tissue Engineering & MechanicsTendon Tissue Engineering & Ligament Mechanics

2026

Deposition of Ag/TMC Nanoparticles via MAPLE to Enhance the Mechanical and Antimicrobial Properties of Silicone Hydrogel

Pouri H, Langlois S, et al.

ACS Omega

BioTester

Hydrated and Temperature Controlled TestingTensile Testing

Hydrogel Mechanical TestingOphthalmic Biomechanics & Corneal Tissue EngineeringPolymers and Elastomers TestingWearable Bioelectronics

2025

Contact Sales

Product of Interest: