Human hair keratin hydrogel : fabrication, characterization and application

Human hair keratins are readily available, easy to extract and eco-friendly materials with promising bioactivities. These properties make them the ideal building blocks for a scaffold. This research was aimed at developing keratin-based materials with an emphasis on keratin hydrogels. We started wit...

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Main Author: Wang, Shuai
Other Authors: Ng Kee Woei
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2015
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/62055
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-620552023-03-04T16:36:24Z Human hair keratin hydrogel : fabrication, characterization and application Wang, Shuai Ng Kee Woei School of Materials Science & Engineering DRNTU::Science::Medicine::Tissue engineering Human hair keratins are readily available, easy to extract and eco-friendly materials with promising bioactivities. These properties make them the ideal building blocks for a scaffold. This research was aimed at developing keratin-based materials with an emphasis on keratin hydrogels. We started with keratin extraction from human hair. The optimized extraction method yields 24 ±1% soluble proteins from human hair. The major components were keratins and keratin associated proteins. The most abundant amino acids were cysteine (>10 mol %), Glutamine/ Glutamic acid (13.6 mol %) and Proline (11 mol %). The first application was using CaCl2 induced keratin hydrogels as 2D cell culture substrates. The CaCl2 induced keratin hydrogels were first tested for physical and mechanical properties. In the in vitro experiment, L929 cells seeded on keratin hydrogels had an average proliferation rate 76% compared to cells on collagen hydrogels. They were also less elongated and formed localized proliferative cell colonies. The second application was using citrate buffer induced keratin hydrogels as 3D cell culture scaffolds. A new keratin gelation method using citrate buffer was developed. Live cell encapsulation was facilitated by controlling factors such as concentration, pH and temperature. This 3D cell culture system was able to support cell viability and proliferation. Further in vitro/ in vivo preliminary studies of keratin-based material demonstrated promising biocompatibility. Thus this novel keratin hydrogel technique has the potential to be used as either 2D or 3D soft tissue templates. DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (MSE) 2015-01-10T02:30:08Z 2015-01-10T02:30:08Z 2014 2014 Thesis Wang, S. (2014). Human hair keratin hydrogel : fabrication, characterization and application. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/62055 10.32657/10356/62055 en 138 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science::Medicine::Tissue engineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science::Medicine::Tissue engineering
Wang, Shuai
Human hair keratin hydrogel : fabrication, characterization and application
description Human hair keratins are readily available, easy to extract and eco-friendly materials with promising bioactivities. These properties make them the ideal building blocks for a scaffold. This research was aimed at developing keratin-based materials with an emphasis on keratin hydrogels. We started with keratin extraction from human hair. The optimized extraction method yields 24 ±1% soluble proteins from human hair. The major components were keratins and keratin associated proteins. The most abundant amino acids were cysteine (>10 mol %), Glutamine/ Glutamic acid (13.6 mol %) and Proline (11 mol %). The first application was using CaCl2 induced keratin hydrogels as 2D cell culture substrates. The CaCl2 induced keratin hydrogels were first tested for physical and mechanical properties. In the in vitro experiment, L929 cells seeded on keratin hydrogels had an average proliferation rate 76% compared to cells on collagen hydrogels. They were also less elongated and formed localized proliferative cell colonies. The second application was using citrate buffer induced keratin hydrogels as 3D cell culture scaffolds. A new keratin gelation method using citrate buffer was developed. Live cell encapsulation was facilitated by controlling factors such as concentration, pH and temperature. This 3D cell culture system was able to support cell viability and proliferation. Further in vitro/ in vivo preliminary studies of keratin-based material demonstrated promising biocompatibility. Thus this novel keratin hydrogel technique has the potential to be used as either 2D or 3D soft tissue templates.
author2 Ng Kee Woei
author_facet Ng Kee Woei
Wang, Shuai
format Theses and Dissertations
author Wang, Shuai
author_sort Wang, Shuai
title Human hair keratin hydrogel : fabrication, characterization and application
title_short Human hair keratin hydrogel : fabrication, characterization and application
title_full Human hair keratin hydrogel : fabrication, characterization and application
title_fullStr Human hair keratin hydrogel : fabrication, characterization and application
title_full_unstemmed Human hair keratin hydrogel : fabrication, characterization and application
title_sort human hair keratin hydrogel : fabrication, characterization and application
publishDate 2015
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/62055
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