Blended nanofibrous biomaterials from natural and synthetic sources show promise for better biointegration. This study explores high-yield alternating field electrospinning (AFES) of blended cold-water fish skin gelatin (FGEL) and polycaprolactone (PCL) nanofibrous meshes with up to 30 wt% PCL at 7.8–14.4 g/h fiber productivity, depending on the composition. FGEL/PCL nanofibers reveal smooth surface morphology and 237–313 nm average diameters after thermal crosslinking. FTIR analysis indicated little FGEL/PCL interaction and notable changes in PCL crystallinity in the crosslinked nanofibers. A 14-days in-vitro analysis shows good cellular viability and nanofibrous FGEL/PCL mesh stability. Results demonstrate that AFES provides efficient, scalable production of blended FGEL/PCL nanofibrous biomaterials with suitable characteristics.
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This content will become publicly available on March 8, 2026
Fish Gelatin‐Carbohydrate Composite Nanofibers: High‐Yield Electrospinning and In Vitro Performance
Abstract Electrospun fish gelatin (FGel) nanofibers (NF) mimic the natural bodies extracellular matrix's (ECM) structure and are an attractive material for many biomedical applications. However, FGel poor mechanical properties and rapid dissolution in an aqueous media paired with usually low productivity of the typical electrospinning process necessitate further effort in overcoming these issues. In this study, alternating field electrospinning (AFES) fabricates cold water fish skin gelatin nanofibrous materials (FGel NFM) with up to 10 wt.% Dextran (DEX) or acetyl glucosamine (AGA) from pure aqueous solutions at process productivity of 7.92–8.90 g∙h−1. Thermal crosslinking of as‐spun materials resulted in FGel‐based NFM with 125–325 nm fiber diameters. DEX (MW500k and MW75k) and AGA additives cause different effects on FGel fiber diameters, structure, tensile and degradation behavior, and in vitro performance. All tested materials reveal favorable, but not the same, cellular response through the formation of a confluent layer on the NFM surface regardless of the fibers’ composition despite the significant difference in FGel NFM structure and properties. Results show that AFES and thermal crosslinking of FGel‐based NFM can lead to a sustainable “green” fabrication technology of mono‐ and polysaccharide modified FGel‐based NFM scaffolds with the parameters attuned to targeted biomedical applications.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1852207
- PAR ID:
- 10576918
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons)
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Macromolecular Rapid Communications
- Volume:
- 46
- Issue:
- 13
- ISSN:
- 1022-1336
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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