Direct reuse of electronic plastic scraps from computer monitor and keyboard to direct stem cell growth and differentiation
Reuse of electronic wastes is a critical aspect for a more sustainable circular economy as it provides the simplest and most direct route to extend the lifespan of non-renewable resources. Herein, the distinctive surface and micro topographical features of computer electronic-plastic (E-plastic) scr...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1597152022-06-29T07:05:59Z Direct reuse of electronic plastic scraps from computer monitor and keyboard to direct stem cell growth and differentiation Shi, Pujiang Tan, Chiew Kei Wu, Zhuoran Gabriel, Jean-Christophe P. Srinivasan, Madhavi Lee, Jong-Min Tay, Chor Yong School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering School of Materials Science and Engineering School of Biological Sciences Energy Research Institute @ NTU (ERI@N) Engineering::Materials Electronic-Plastics Waste Valorization Reuse of electronic wastes is a critical aspect for a more sustainable circular economy as it provides the simplest and most direct route to extend the lifespan of non-renewable resources. Herein, the distinctive surface and micro topographical features of computer electronic-plastic (E-plastic) scraps were unconventionally repurposed as a substrate material to guide the growth and differentiation of human adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells (ADSCs). Specifically, the E-plastics were scavenged from discarded computer components such as light diffuser plate (polyacrylates), prismatic sheet (polyethylene terephthalate), and keyboards (acrylonitrile butadiene styrene) were cleaned, sterilized, and systematically characterized to determine the identity of the plastics, chemical constituents, surface features, and leaching characteristics. Multiparametric analysis revealed that all the E-plastics could preserve stem-cell phenotype and maintain cell growth over 2 weeks, rivalling the performance of commercial tissue-culture treated plates as cell culture plastics. Interestingly, compared to commercial tissue-culture treated plastics and in a competitive adipogenic and osteogenic differentiation environment, ADSCs cultured on the keyboard and light diffuser plastics favoured bone cells formation while the grating-like microstructures of the prismatic sheet promoted fat cells differentiation via the process of contact guidance. Our findings point to the real possibility of utilizing discarded computer plastics as a "waste-to-resource" material to programme stem cell fate without further processing nor biochemical modification, thus providing an innovative second-life option for E-plastics from personal computers. National Environmental Agency (NEA) National Research Foundation (NRF) This research is supported by the National Research Foundation, Singapore, and National Environment Agency, Singapore under its Closing the Waste Loop Funding Initiative (Award No. USS-IF-2018-4). 2022-06-29T07:05:59Z 2022-06-29T07:05:59Z 2022 Journal Article Shi, P., Tan, C. K., Wu, Z., Gabriel, J. P., Srinivasan, M., Lee, J. & Tay, C. Y. (2022). Direct reuse of electronic plastic scraps from computer monitor and keyboard to direct stem cell growth and differentiation. The Science of the Total Environment, 807 Pt 3, 151085-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.151085 0048-9697 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/159715 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.151085 34749966 2-s2.0-85118535209 807 Pt 3 151085 en USS-IF-2018-4 The Science of the Total Environment © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. |
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Engineering::Materials Electronic-Plastics Waste Valorization Shi, Pujiang Tan, Chiew Kei Wu, Zhuoran Gabriel, Jean-Christophe P. Srinivasan, Madhavi Lee, Jong-Min Tay, Chor Yong Direct reuse of electronic plastic scraps from computer monitor and keyboard to direct stem cell growth and differentiation |
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Reuse of electronic wastes is a critical aspect for a more sustainable circular economy as it provides the simplest and most direct route to extend the lifespan of non-renewable resources. Herein, the distinctive surface and micro topographical features of computer electronic-plastic (E-plastic) scraps were unconventionally repurposed as a substrate material to guide the growth and differentiation of human adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells (ADSCs). Specifically, the E-plastics were scavenged from discarded computer components such as light diffuser plate (polyacrylates), prismatic sheet (polyethylene terephthalate), and keyboards (acrylonitrile butadiene styrene) were cleaned, sterilized, and systematically characterized to determine the identity of the plastics, chemical constituents, surface features, and leaching characteristics. Multiparametric analysis revealed that all the E-plastics could preserve stem-cell phenotype and maintain cell growth over 2 weeks, rivalling the performance of commercial tissue-culture treated plates as cell culture plastics. Interestingly, compared to commercial tissue-culture treated plastics and in a competitive adipogenic and osteogenic differentiation environment, ADSCs cultured on the keyboard and light diffuser plastics favoured bone cells formation while the grating-like microstructures of the prismatic sheet promoted fat cells differentiation via the process of contact guidance. Our findings point to the real possibility of utilizing discarded computer plastics as a "waste-to-resource" material to programme stem cell fate without further processing nor biochemical modification, thus providing an innovative second-life option for E-plastics from personal computers. |
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School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering |
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School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering Shi, Pujiang Tan, Chiew Kei Wu, Zhuoran Gabriel, Jean-Christophe P. Srinivasan, Madhavi Lee, Jong-Min Tay, Chor Yong |
format |
Article |
author |
Shi, Pujiang Tan, Chiew Kei Wu, Zhuoran Gabriel, Jean-Christophe P. Srinivasan, Madhavi Lee, Jong-Min Tay, Chor Yong |
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Shi, Pujiang |
title |
Direct reuse of electronic plastic scraps from computer monitor and keyboard to direct stem cell growth and differentiation |
title_short |
Direct reuse of electronic plastic scraps from computer monitor and keyboard to direct stem cell growth and differentiation |
title_full |
Direct reuse of electronic plastic scraps from computer monitor and keyboard to direct stem cell growth and differentiation |
title_fullStr |
Direct reuse of electronic plastic scraps from computer monitor and keyboard to direct stem cell growth and differentiation |
title_full_unstemmed |
Direct reuse of electronic plastic scraps from computer monitor and keyboard to direct stem cell growth and differentiation |
title_sort |
direct reuse of electronic plastic scraps from computer monitor and keyboard to direct stem cell growth and differentiation |
publishDate |
2022 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10356/159715 |
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1738844946220187648 |