Healthy tendons are mainly composed of aligned collagen hierarchically organized from collagen fibrils to fiber bundles with a scarce cellular population mainly composed of tenocytes and tendon stem/progenitor cells. However, injured tendon acquires a fibrotic state characterized by a loss of ECM alignment and increased cellularization. The lack of reliable 3D models that recreate the organization and microenvironment of healthy and diseased tendons is one of the main obstacles faced by the scientific community. To recreate the architecture of healthy and diseased tendons, electrospun nanofiber scaffolds with anisotropic and isotropic nanotopography were developed. These scaffolds were coated with a shell consisting of cell-laden hydrogels encapsulating human adipose-derived stem cells (hASCs) to include the living component. To show the versatility of the system, extracellular vesicles (EVs) were encapsulated in the hydrogel as biological cues. The living fibers were characterized by microscopy and morphological analysis. The morphology and phenotype of cells was evaluated using microscopy, gene expression analysis and immunostainings for tendon markers.Introduction
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