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- (3dc) Materials for 4D Biology: Spatial and Temporal Control of the Stem Cell Niche
While cell-laden PEG hydrogel constructs have been employed for regenerative medicine and fundamental biological applications, there is still a lack of materials that allow the user to recapitulate the spatially heterogeneous and dynamic environment that cells interact with in vivo. My Ph.D. research has focused on the development, characterization, and application of photoresponsive PEG-based hydrogels that afford the user control of the mechanical and biochemical properties of the scaffold in both 3D space and time. This class of materials facilitates experiments that probe the relationship between spatially heterogeneous and dynamic signals from the ECM and cell function in a well-defined environment to study the fundamentals of the cell-material interactions, stem cell differentiation and plasticity, as well as the cellular response to local changes in soluble factor concentration.
Specifically, we have developed photoresponsive materials for the dynamic modulation of the ECM during 2D and 3D culture. These materials have been used to investigate stem cell response to dynamic changes in elasticity and the plasticity of stem cells during microenvironmental mechanotransduction. Further, we have utilized photoresponsive hydrogels to develop photodegradable microspheres for the targeted delivery of soluble factors to study tissue morphogenesis and chemotaxis. Thin films of photodegradable hydrogel have been employed for the selective capture and release of cells for diagnostic application. Click-based, enzymatically and photodegradable hydrogels have been used as advanced 3D culture platforms that promote cell function while permitting the analysis of cell behavior through the recovery of cultured cells.