Volume 108, Issue 3
ORIGINAL RESEARCH REPORT
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Oxygen‐releasing polycaprolactone/calcium peroxide composite microspheres

Mengen Zhang

Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota

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Tawan Kiratiwongwan

Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota

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Wei Shen

Corresponding Author

E-mail address: shenx104@umn.edu

Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota

Correspondence

Wei Shen, Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA.

Email: shenx104@umn.edu

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First published: 08 August 2019
Citations: 1

Funding information: Division of Materials Research, Grant/Award Number: DMR‐1151529

Abstract

Oxygen‐releasing polycaprolactone/calcium peroxide (PCL/CaO2) composite microspheres were fabricated via homogenization, electrospray with a single nozzle, and electrospray with a co‐axial nozzle, resulting in homogenized, single‐walled, and double‐walled microspheres, respectively. Scanning electron microscopy revealed that homogenized microspheres had pores, while electrosprayed microspheres did not. Alizarin Red S staining showed a core‐shell structure for double‐walled microspheres. In a hypoxia incubator, single‐walled, double‐walled, and homogenized microspheres could maintain oxygen tension in PBS at or above 10% for approximately 5, 4, and 3 days, respectively. All the PCL/CaO2 microspheres could support viability of pancreatic β‐cell line MIN6 cells in 2D cultures in a hypoxia incubator for 1 week, with the cells supported by double‐walled and homogenized microspheres exhibiting the highest and the lowest metabolic activity, respectively. For 3D MIN6 cell cultures in a hypoxia incubator, single‐walled and homogenized PCL/CaO2 microspheres led to the highest and the lowest live cell densities, respectively. Double‐walled and single‐walled microspheres provided the best support for 2D and 3D cultures, respectively, suggesting that they are suitable for different applications.

Number of times cited according to CrossRef: 1

  • Electrospraying Oxygen-Generating Microparticles for Tissue Engineering Applications

    ,
    International Journal of Nanomedicine, 10.2147/IJN.S237334, Volume 15, (1173-1186), (2020).

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