Improving the Biocompatibility of Plant-Derived Scaffolds for Tissue Engineering Using Heat Treatment

Small-diameter vascular grafts often fail due to thrombosis and compliance mismatch. Decellularized plant scaffolds are a biocompatible, sustainable alternative. Leatherleaf viburnum leaves provide natural architecture and mechanical integrity suitable for tissue-engineered vessels. However, the per...

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Published in:Journal of Functional Biomaterials
Main Authors: Arvind Ramsamooj, Nicole Gorbenko, Cristian Olivares, Sashane John, Nick Merna
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-10-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2079-4983/16/10/380
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author Arvind Ramsamooj
Nicole Gorbenko
Cristian Olivares
Sashane John
Nick Merna
author_facet Arvind Ramsamooj
Nicole Gorbenko
Cristian Olivares
Sashane John
Nick Merna
author_sort Arvind Ramsamooj
collection DOAJ
container_title Journal of Functional Biomaterials
description Small-diameter vascular grafts often fail due to thrombosis and compliance mismatch. Decellularized plant scaffolds are a biocompatible, sustainable alternative. Leatherleaf viburnum leaves provide natural architecture and mechanical integrity suitable for tissue-engineered vessels. However, the persistence of immunogenic plant biomolecules and limited degradability remain barriers to clinical use. This study tested whether mild heat treatment improves scaffold biocompatibility without compromising mechanical performance. Decellularized leatherleaf viburnum scaffolds were treated at 30–40 °C in 5% NaOH for 15–60 min and then evaluated via tensile testing, burst pressure analysis, scanning electron microscopy, histology, and in vitro assays with white blood cells and endothelial cells. Scaffold properties were compared to those of untreated controls. Heat treatment did not significantly affect scaffold thickness but decreased fiber area fraction and diameter across all anatomical layers. Scaffolds treated at 30–35 °C for ≤30 min retained >90% of tensile strength and achieved burst pressures ≥820 mmHg, exceeding physiological arterial pressures. Heat treatment reduced surface fractal dimension while increasing entropy and lacunarity, producing a smoother but more heterogeneous microarchitecture. White blood cell viability increased up to 2.5-fold and endothelial cell seeding efficiency improved with treatment duration, with 60 min producing near-confluent monolayers. Mild alkaline heat treatment therefore improved immune compatibility and endothelialization while preserving mechanical integrity, offering a simple, scalable modification to advance plant-derived scaffolds for grafting.
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spelling doaj-art-2a367b2de03646be97900a6f2ec402652025-10-28T16:46:20ZengMDPI AGJournal of Functional Biomaterials2079-49832025-10-01161038010.3390/jfb16100380Improving the Biocompatibility of Plant-Derived Scaffolds for Tissue Engineering Using Heat TreatmentArvind Ramsamooj0Nicole Gorbenko1Cristian Olivares2Sashane John3Nick Merna4Fred DeMatteis School of Engineering and Applied Science, Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY 11549, USAFred DeMatteis School of Engineering and Applied Science, Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY 11549, USAFred DeMatteis School of Engineering and Applied Science, Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY 11549, USAFred DeMatteis School of Engineering and Applied Science, Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY 11549, USAFred DeMatteis School of Engineering and Applied Science, Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY 11549, USASmall-diameter vascular grafts often fail due to thrombosis and compliance mismatch. Decellularized plant scaffolds are a biocompatible, sustainable alternative. Leatherleaf viburnum leaves provide natural architecture and mechanical integrity suitable for tissue-engineered vessels. However, the persistence of immunogenic plant biomolecules and limited degradability remain barriers to clinical use. This study tested whether mild heat treatment improves scaffold biocompatibility without compromising mechanical performance. Decellularized leatherleaf viburnum scaffolds were treated at 30–40 °C in 5% NaOH for 15–60 min and then evaluated via tensile testing, burst pressure analysis, scanning electron microscopy, histology, and in vitro assays with white blood cells and endothelial cells. Scaffold properties were compared to those of untreated controls. Heat treatment did not significantly affect scaffold thickness but decreased fiber area fraction and diameter across all anatomical layers. Scaffolds treated at 30–35 °C for ≤30 min retained >90% of tensile strength and achieved burst pressures ≥820 mmHg, exceeding physiological arterial pressures. Heat treatment reduced surface fractal dimension while increasing entropy and lacunarity, producing a smoother but more heterogeneous microarchitecture. White blood cell viability increased up to 2.5-fold and endothelial cell seeding efficiency improved with treatment duration, with 60 min producing near-confluent monolayers. Mild alkaline heat treatment therefore improved immune compatibility and endothelialization while preserving mechanical integrity, offering a simple, scalable modification to advance plant-derived scaffolds for grafting.https://www.mdpi.com/2079-4983/16/10/380decellularizationplant-derived scaffoldsbiocompatibilitytissue engineering
spellingShingle Arvind Ramsamooj
Nicole Gorbenko
Cristian Olivares
Sashane John
Nick Merna
Improving the Biocompatibility of Plant-Derived Scaffolds for Tissue Engineering Using Heat Treatment
decellularization
plant-derived scaffolds
biocompatibility
tissue engineering
title Improving the Biocompatibility of Plant-Derived Scaffolds for Tissue Engineering Using Heat Treatment
title_full Improving the Biocompatibility of Plant-Derived Scaffolds for Tissue Engineering Using Heat Treatment
title_fullStr Improving the Biocompatibility of Plant-Derived Scaffolds for Tissue Engineering Using Heat Treatment
title_full_unstemmed Improving the Biocompatibility of Plant-Derived Scaffolds for Tissue Engineering Using Heat Treatment
title_short Improving the Biocompatibility of Plant-Derived Scaffolds for Tissue Engineering Using Heat Treatment
title_sort improving the biocompatibility of plant derived scaffolds for tissue engineering using heat treatment
topic decellularization
plant-derived scaffolds
biocompatibility
tissue engineering
url https://www.mdpi.com/2079-4983/16/10/380
work_keys_str_mv AT arvindramsamooj improvingthebiocompatibilityofplantderivedscaffoldsfortissueengineeringusingheattreatment
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AT cristianolivares improvingthebiocompatibilityofplantderivedscaffoldsfortissueengineeringusingheattreatment
AT sashanejohn improvingthebiocompatibilityofplantderivedscaffoldsfortissueengineeringusingheattreatment
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