Publications by authors named "Anastasia V Sochilina"

Photocrosslinkable hydrogels based on hyaluronic acid are promising biomaterials high in demand in tissue engineering. Typically, hydrogels are photocured under the action of UV or blue light strongly absorbed by biotissues, which limits prototyping under living organism conditions. To overcome this limitation, we propose the derivatives of well-known photosensitizers, namely chlorin , chlorin and phthalocyanine, as those for radical polymerization in the transparency window of biotissues.

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Non-invasive visualization and monitoring of tissue-engineered structures in a living organism is a challenge. One possible solution to this problem is to use upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs) as photoluminescent nanomarkers in scaffolds. We synthesized and studied scaffolds based on natural (collagen-COL and hyaluronic acid-HA) and synthetic (polylactic-co-glycolic acids-PLGA) polymers loaded with β-NaYF:Yb, Er nanocrystals (21 ± 6 nm).

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Modern biocompatible materials of both natural and synthetic origin, in combination with advanced techniques for their processing and functionalization, provide the basis for tissue engineering constructs (TECs) for the effective replacement of specific body defects and guided tissue regeneration. Here we describe TECs fabricated using electrospinning and 3D printing techniques on a base of synthetic (polylactic-co-glycolic acids, PLGA) and natural (collagen, COL, and hyaluronic acid, HA) polymers impregnated with core/shell β-NaYF:Yb,Er/NaYF upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs) for in vitro control of the tissue/scaffold interaction. Polymeric structures impregnated with core/shell β-NaYF:Yb,Er/NaYF nanoparticles were visualized with high optical contrast using laser irradiation at 976 nm.

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Brain tissue reconstruction posttraumatic injury remains a long-standing challenge in neurotransplantology, where a tissue-engineering construct (scaffold, SC) with specific biochemical properties is deemed the most essential building block. Such three-dimensional (3D) hydrogel scaffolds can be formed using brain-abundant endogenous hyaluronic acid modified with glycidyl methacrylate by employing our proprietary photopolymerisation technique. Herein, we produced 3D hyaluronic scaffolds impregnated with neurotrophic factors (BDNF, GDNF) possessing 600 kPa Young's moduli and 336% swelling ratios.

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Wide application of chitosan in modern technologies is limited by the lack of reliable and low-cost techniques to prepare size-tuned constructs with a complex surface morphology, improved optical and mechanical properties. We report a new simple method for preparation of transparent thermoreversible chitosan alcogels from chitosan/HO/ethanol ternary systems. This method, termed "low temperature thermally induced phase separation under non-freezing conditions" (LT-TIPS-NF), fine tunes gelation by adjusting only temperature (from 5 to -25 °C) and varying the initial content of chitosan (from 0.

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Bioprinting emerges as a powerful flexible approach for tissue engineering with prospective capability to produce tissue on demand, including biomimetic hollow-core fiber structures. In spite of significance for tissue engineering, hollow-core structures proved difficult to fabricate, with the existing methods limited to multistage, time-consuming, and cumbersome procedures. Here, we report a versatile cell-friendly photopolymerization approach that enables single-step prototyping of hollow-core as well as solid-core hydrogel fibers initially loaded with living cells.

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In this study, we prepared hydrogel scaffolds for tissue engineering by computer-assisted extrusion three-dimensional (3D) printing with photocured (λ = 445 nm) hyaluronic acid glycidyl methacrylate (HAGM). The developed product was compared with the polylactic--glycolic acid (PLGA) scaffolds generated by means of the original antisolvent 3D printing methodology. The cytotoxicity and cytocompatibility of the scaffolds were analyzed by 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide tests, flow cytometry, and scanning electron microscopy.

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In this study, a new method for production of hydrogels with oriented multichannel structure based on chitosan-poly(vinyl alcohol) compositions was developed. Microscopic and biological studies of the obtained hydrogels were conducted to determine the optimal composition, which would ensure that structure of the material mimics that of the epineurium and perineurium in a nerve. Structure of the hydrogels was adjusted by variation of the initial concentration of the precipitant, poly(vinyl alcohol), and acid in the chitosan compositions.

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