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    An Injectable Hybrid Hydrogel with Oriented Short Fibers Induces Unidirectional Growth of Functional Nerve Cells
    (Weinheim : Wiley-VCH, 2017) Omidinia-Anarkoli, Abdolrahman; Boesveld, Sarah; Tuvshindorj, Urandelger; Rose, Jonas C.; Haraszti, Tamás; De Laporte, Laura
    To regenerate soft aligned tissues in living organisms, low invasive biomaterials are required to create 3D microenvironments with a structural complexity to mimic the tissue's native architecture. Here, a tunable injectable hydrogel is reported, which allows precise engineering of the construct's anisotropy in situ. This material is defined as an Anisogel, representing a new type of tissue regenerative therapy. The Anisogel comprises a soft hydrogel, surrounding magneto-responsive, cell adhesive, short fibers, which orient in situ in the direction of a low external magnetic field, before complete gelation of the matrix. The magnetic field can be removed after gelation of the biocompatible gel precursor, which fixes the aligned fibers and preserves the anisotropic structure of the Anisogel. Fibroblasts and nerve cells grow and extend unidirectionally within the Anisogels, in comparison to hydrogels without fibers or with randomly oriented fibers. The neurons inside the Anisogel show spontaneous electrical activity with calcium signals propagating along the anisotropy axis of the material. The reported system is simple and elegant and the short magneto-responsive fibers can be produced with an effective high-throughput method, ideal for a minimal invasive route for aligned tissue therapy.
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    A Light-Driven Microgel Rotor
    (Weinheim : Wiley-VCH, 2019) Zhang, Hang; Koens, Lyndon; Lauga, Eric; Mourran, Ahmed; Möller, Martin
    The current understanding of motility through body shape deformation of micro-organisms and the knowledge of fluid flows at the microscale provides ample examples for mimicry and design of soft microrobots. In this work, a 2D spiral is presented that is capable of rotating by non-reciprocal curling deformations. The body of the microswimmer is a ribbon consisting of a thermoresponsive hydrogel bilayer with embedded plasmonic gold nanorods. Such a system allows fast local photothermal heating and nonreciprocal bending deformation of the hydrogel bilayer under nonequilibrium conditions. It is shown that the spiral acts as a spring capable of large deformations thanks to its low stiffness, which is tunable by the swelling degree of the hydrogel and the temperature. Tethering the ribbon to a freely rotating microsphere enables rotational motion of the spiral by stroboscopic irradiation. The efficiency of the rotor is estimated using resistive force theory for Stokes flow. This research demonstrates microscopic locomotion by the shape change of a spiral and may find applications in the field of microfluidics, or soft microrobotics.
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    Biadhesive Peptides for Assembling Stainless Steel and Compound Loaded Micro-Containers
    (Weinheim : Wiley-VCH, 2019) Apitius, Lina; Buschmann, Sven; Bergs, Christian; Schönauer, David; Jakob, Felix; Pich, Andrij; Schwaneberg, Ulrich
    Biadhesive peptides (peptesives) are an attractive tool for assembling two chemically different materials—for example, stainless steel and polycaprolactone (PCL). Stainless steel is used in medical stents and PCL is used as a biodegradable polymer for fabrication of tissue growth scaffolds and drug delivering micro-containers. Biadhesive peptides are composed of two domains (e.g., dermaseptin S1 and LCI) with different material-binding properties that are separated through a stiff peptide-spacer. The peptesive dermaseptin S1-domain Z-LCI immobilizes antibiotic-loaded PCL micro-containers on stainless steel surfaces. Immobilization is visualized by microscopy and field emission scanning electron microscopy analysis and released antibiotic from the micro-containers is confirmed through growth inhibition of Escherichia coli cells.
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    Precultures Grown under Fed-Batch Conditions Increase the Reliability and Reproducibility of High-Throughput Screening Results
    (Weinheim : Wiley-VCH, 2019) Keil, Timm; Landenberger, Markus; Dittrich, Barbara; Selzer, Sebastian; Büchs, Jochen
    One essential task in bioprocess development is strain selection. A common screening procedure consists of three steps: first, the picking of colonies; second, the execution of a batch preculture and main culture, e.g., in microtiter plates (MTPs); and third, the evaluation of product formation. Especially during the picking step, unintended variations occur due to undefined amounts and varying viability of transferred cells. The aim of this study is to demonstrate that the application of polymer-based controlled-release fed-batch MTPs during preculture eliminates these variations. The concept of equalizing growth through fed-batch conditions during preculture is theoretically discussed and then tested in a model system, namely, a cellulase-producing Escherichia coli clone bank containing 32 strains. Preculture is conducted once in the batch mode and once in the fed-batch mode. By applying the fed-batch mode, equalized growth is observed in the subsequent main culture. Furthermore, the standard deviation of cellulase activity is reduced compared to that observed in the conventional approach. Compared with the strains in the batch preculture process, the first-ranked strain in the fed-batch preculture process is the superior cellulase producer. These findings recommend the application of the fed-batch MTPs during preculture in high-throughput screening processes to achieve accurate and reliable results. © 2019 The Authors. Biotechnology Journal Published by WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim