» Articles » PMID: 39996684

The Optimization of Culture Conditions for Injectable Recombinant Collagen Hydrogel Preparation Using Machine Learning

Overview
Journal Gels
Date 2025 Feb 25
PMID 39996684
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Injectable recombinant collagen hydrogels (RCHs) are crucial in biomedical applications. Culture conditions play an important role in the preparation of hydrogels. However, determining the characteristics of hydrogels under certain conditions and determining the optimal conditions swiftly still remain challenging tasks. In this study, a machine learning approach was introduced to explore the correlation between hydrogel characteristics and culture conditions and determine the optimal culture conditions. The study focused on four key factors as independent variables: initial substrate concentration, reaction temperature, pH level, and reaction time, while the dependent variable was the elastic modulus of the hydrogels. To analyze the impact of these factors on the elastic modulus, four mathematical models were employed, including multiple linear regression (ML), decision tree (DT), support vector machine (SVM), and neural network (NN). The theoretical outputs of NN were closest to the actual values. Therefore, NN proved to be the most suitable model. Subsequently, the optimal culture conditions were identified as a substrate concentration of 15% (/), a reaction temperature of 4 °C, a pH of 7.0, and a reaction time of 12 h. The hydrogels prepared under these specific conditions exhibited a predicted elastic modulus of 15,340 Pa, approaching that of natural elastic cartilage.

References
1.
Su T, Zhang M, Zeng Q, Pan W, Huang Y, Qian Y . Mussel-inspired agarose hydrogel scaffolds for skin tissue engineering. Bioact Mater. 2020; 6(3):579-588. PMC: 7509181. DOI: 10.1016/j.bioactmat.2020.09.004. View

2.
Fan M, Ma Y, Mao J, Zhang Z, Tan H . Cytocompatible in situ forming chitosan/hyaluronan hydrogels via a metal-free click chemistry for soft tissue engineering. Acta Biomater. 2015; 20:60-68. DOI: 10.1016/j.actbio.2015.03.033. View

3.
Sukarto A, Yu C, Flynn L, Amsden B . Co-delivery of adipose-derived stem cells and growth factor-loaded microspheres in RGD-grafted N-methacrylate glycol chitosan gels for focal chondral repair. Biomacromolecules. 2012; 13(8):2490-502. DOI: 10.1021/bm300733n. View

4.
Yuan W, Li S, Guan H, Zhang S, Zhang Y, Zhang M . Preparation and Properties of a Novel Biodegradable Composite Hydrogel Derived from Gelatin/Chitosan and Polylactic Acid as Slow-Release N Fertilizer. Polymers (Basel). 2023; 15(4). PMC: 9964145. DOI: 10.3390/polym15040997. View

5.
Niemczyk-Soczynska B, Kolbuk D, Mikulowski G, Ciechomska I, Sajkiewicz P . Methylcellulose/agarose hydrogel loaded with short electrospun PLLA/laminin fibers as an injectable scaffold for tissue engineering/3D cell culture model for tumour therapies. RSC Adv. 2023; 13(18):11889-11902. PMC: 10107725. DOI: 10.1039/d3ra00851g. View