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Despite the attention given to the development of novel responsive implants for regenerative medicine applications, the lack of integration with the surrounding tissues and the mismatch with the dynamic mechanobiological nature of native soft tissues remain in the current products. Hierarchical porous membranes based on a poly (urea-urethane) (PUU) nanohybrid have been fabricated by thermally induced phase separation (TIPS) of the polymer solution at different temperatures. Thermoresponsive stiffness softening of the membranes through phase transition from the semicrystalline phase to rubber phase and reverse self-assembly of the quasi-random nanophase structure is characterized at body temperature near the melting point of the crystalline domains of soft segments. The effects of the porous structure and stiffness softening on proliferation and differentiation of human bone-marrow mesenchymal stem cells (hBM-MSCs) are investigated. The results of immunohistochemistry, histological, ELISA, and qPCR demonstrate that hBM-MSCs maintain their lineage commitment during stiffness relaxation; chondrogenic differentiation is favored on the soft and porous scaffold, while osteogenic differentiation is more prominent on the initial stiff one. Stiffness relaxation stimulates more osteogenic activity than chondrogenesis, the latter being more influenced by the synergetic coupling effect of softness and porosity.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adhm.201801556 | DOI Listing |
Sci Rep
September 2025
Paul M. Rady Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Colorado Boulder, 1111 Engineering Drive, UCB 427, Boulder, CO, 80309, USA.
Identifying and diagnosing early-stage rheumatoid arthritis (RA) has remained an unmet challenge in medicine and a roadblock to identifying treatments at time points when disease-modifying therapies may be most effective. Recent studies have demonstrated that imaging the response of cartilage under mechanical loading, as well as alterations in matrix macro- and micro-molecule composition, could serve as potential biomarkers to identify tissue degeneration. Therefore, the objective of this paper was to identify RA-related cartilage degeneration in human wrists using novel MRI techniques.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMater Today Bio
October 2025
University of Trieste, Department of Life Sciences, Via L. Giorgieri 5, Trieste, 34127, Italy.
The mechanical complexity of the extracellular matrix (ECM) is central to how cells sense and respond to their environment, yet hydrogel design has often focused narrowly on stiffness. Emerging evidence highlights the importance of viscoelastic stress relaxation and plasticity in cell mechanotransduction. However, a key aspect remains underexplored: non-linear viscoelasticity, where stress relaxation and plasticity depend on the magnitude of applied stress or strain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoft Matter
September 2025
Dow Consumer Solutions, The Dow Chemical Company, Midland, Michigan 48686, USA.
Fumed silica is widely used as a reinforcing filler and rheology modifier for polymer composites. Untreated, hydrophilic fumed silica formulated into silicone polymer typically leads to a stiff, brittle material due to strong association between the silica surface silanol and the siloxane backbone. However, this hydrophilic silica/silicone mixture can be sheared into a flowable material, with comparable rheological behaviour to a mixture of silicone polymer and a hydrophobically modified silica.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Sci (Weinh)
August 2025
Faculty of Science and Engineering, Dalton Building, Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, M1 5GD, UK.
Active mechanical metamaterials have the potential to revolutionize material capabilities, by switching between different properties. The active mechanical metamaterial presented here can be remotely programmed to switch between compressive and shear deformation modes that cause stark changes in stiffness. The considered metamaterial uses controlled instabilities to change the buckling mode of electro-thermally activated beams.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Biomater
August 2025
Department of Chemical Engineering, Delft University of Technology, Delft, the Netherlands. Electronic address:
Collagen networks form the structural backbone of the extracellular matrix in both healthy and cancerous tissues, exhibiting nonlinear mechanical properties that crucially regulate tissue mechanics and cell behavior. Here, we investigate how the presence of invasive breast cancer cells (MDA-MB-231) influences the polymerization kinetics and mechanics of collagen networks using bulk shear rheology and rheo-confocal microscopy. We show that embedded cancer cells delay the onset of collagen polymerization due to volume exclusion effects.
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