Tissue engineering approach consists in combining cells, engineering and biomaterials to improve the biological functions of damaged tissues or to replace them. Production of “artificial tissues” is still challenging and requires collaboration of scientists from different domains like cell biology, chemistry, materials and polymer science. Skeletal muscle tissue engineering holds promise for the replacement of muscle due to an injury and for the treatment of muscle diseases, such as muscle dystrophies or paralysis, but is also required for pharmaceutical assays. To this end, materials with tunable mechanical and biochemical properties for myoblast expansion and differentiation in vitro, as well as for the studies of myogenesis on controlled 2D microenvironments or in 3D scaffolds, are crucially needed. In this work, we use layer-by-layer (LbL) assemblies for two goals. The first consisted in the development of multifunctional biomimetic thin films for the control of skeletal muscle cell fate on 2D substrates. We use LbL films made of polypeptides, which can be stiffened by chemical cross-linking and can be specifically functionalized by grafting of biomimetic peptides onto their surface. In addition, we combined the peptide-grafted films with substrate microtopography. Such approach is promising for the development or multifunctional materials that combine the different stimuli present in in vivo ECM, among them physical and biochemical cues, but also microtopography. In the second part, we use LbL assemblies for the construction of 3D skeletal muscle microtissues. This allows to rapidly build 3D muscle tissues and is promising for the in vitro construction of physiologically relevant skeletal muscle tissue models.
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