摘要
Scaffolds with adequate mass transport properties are needed in many tissue engineering applications. Fibrin is considered a good biological material to fabricate such scaffolds. However, very little is known about mass transport in fibrin. Therefore, a method based on the analysis of fluorescence intensity for measuring the apparent diffusion coefficient of rhodamine B and fluorescein-labelled bovine serum albumin (FITC-BSA) is described. The experiments are performed in fibrin gels with and without human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC). The apparent diffusion coefficients of rhodamine B and FITC-BSA in fibrin (fibrinogen concentration of 4 mg/mL) with different cell densities are reported. A LIVE/DEAD庐 assay is performed to confirm the viability of HUVEC seeded at high densities. Diffusion coefficients for rhodamine B remain more or less constant up to 5 脳 105 cells/mL and correlate well with literature values measured by other methods in water systems. This indicates that the presence of HUVEC in the fibrin gels (up to 5 脳 105 cells/mL) has almost no effect on the diffusion coefficients. Higher cell densities (>5 脳 105 cells/mL) result in a decrease of the diffusion coefficients. Diffusion coefficients of rhodamine B and FITC-BSA obtained by this method agree with diffusion coefficients in water predicted by the Stokes-Einstein equation. The experimental design used in this study can be applied to measure diffusion coefficients in different types of gels seeded or not with living cells.