4.8 Article

Micropatterned Hydrogels with Highly Ordered Cellulose Nanocrystals for Visually Monitoring Cardiomyocytes

Journal

SMALL
Volume 18, Issue 45, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/smll.202202235

Keywords

cardiomyocytes; highly ordered tunicate cellulose nanocrystals; micropatterned hydrogels; multi-chamber devices; visualized monitoring systems

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFE0123700, 2021YFA1101902]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52073217, 51873164, 31871496]
  3. Key Research and Development Program of Hubei Province [2020BCA079]

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Cardiac microphysiological systems are accurate in vitro platforms for studying cardiopathy. In this study, micropatterned hydrogels were prepared using shear-oriented tunicate cellulose nanocrystals and methacrylated gelatin, allowing visualization and monitoring of cardiomyocytes. These hydrogels can dynamically shift interference colors in response to the beating of cardiomyocytes, and can noninvasively monitor real-time changes of cardiomyocytes under pharmaceutical treatment and electrical stimulation.
Cardiac microphysiological systems are accurate in vitro platforms that reveal the biological mechanisms underlying cardiopathy, accelerating pharmaceutical research in this field. Current cardiac microphysiological devices and organs-on-chips consist of several layers prepared with complex, multi-step processes. Incorporating inorganic photonic crystals may cause long-term biocompatibility issues. Herein, micropatterned hydrogels with anisotropic structural colors are prepared by locking shear-oriented tunicate cellulose nanocrystals (TCNCs) in hydrogel networks through in situ polymerization, allowing the visualization and monitoring of cardiomyocytes. The anisotropic hydrogels are composed of highly ordered TCNCs with bright interference color and micro-grooved methacrylated gelatin with excellent biocompatibility. The microgroove patterns induce cardiomyocyte alignment and the autonomous beating of cardiomyocytes causes the hydrogels to deform, dynamically shifting the interference color. These micropatterned hydrogels could noninvasively monitor real-time changes of cardiomyocytes under pharmaceutical treatment and electrical stimulation through wavelength shifts in the transmittance spectra. This system provides a new way to detect the beat rate of cardiac tissue and it may contribute to high throughput develop.

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