The critical shortage of transplantable skin remains a leading cause of mortality in patients with severe skin injuries, driving the demand for advanced 3D-bioprinted constructs. While hydrogel-based bioinks are pivotal for skin tissue engineering, existing systems often fail to simultaneously address biomechanical compatibility, scar suppression, and cell viability. Here, we propose a rationally designed sodium alginate/gelatin (SA/Gel) hydrogel platform through composition-property-performance correlation analysis. Systematic characterization revealed that increasing gelatin content (8-12 wt%) enhanced viscosity (by 2.5-fold), compressive modulus (25.6 ± 2.7 kPa to 37.9 ± 3.5 kPa), tensile fracture elongation (57.9 ± 4.2% to 92.1 ± 1.3%), and print fidelity, while reducing degradation ratio (62.8 ± 2.9% to 26.4 ± 2.4% at day 14) and pore size (128.5 ± 16.6 μm to 79.4 ± 19.7 μm). The optimized A4G10 formulation exhibited synergistic advantages: (1) dynamic swelling (36.3 ± 0.8%) balanced nutrient permeation with structural stability; (2) tunable degradation (47.2% at day 14) matched neo-tissue formation; (3) anisotropic mechanical properties (compressive modulus 32.2 ± 4.1 kPa, tensile modulus 31.7 ± 3.9 kPa) mimicked native skin mechanics; (4) sub-100 μm porous architecture (102.9 ± 12.4 μm) effectively suppressed fibroblast over--proliferation. Remarkably, the SA/Gel scaffolds maintained 98% cell viability (Live/Dead assay) in vitro, while suppressing fibrotic tissue formation and facilitating angiogenesis in vivo. This multi-functional SA/Gel system demonstrates unprecedented potential as a scar--inhibiting bioink for clinical-grade skin regeneration.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Biomaterials Science, Polymer Edition publishes fundamental research on the properties of polymeric biomaterials and the mechanisms of interaction between such biomaterials and living organisms, with special emphasis on the molecular and cellular levels.
The scope of the journal includes polymers for drug delivery, tissue engineering, large molecules in living organisms like DNA, proteins and more. As such, the Journal of Biomaterials Science, Polymer Edition combines biomaterials applications in biomedical, pharmaceutical and biological fields.