1. Researchers prepared crosslinked poly(aspartic acid) nanofibers using electrospinning for applications in tissue engineering and as hernia meshes. Electrospinning produced non-woven fibers from a polymer solution of poly(succinimide) modified with cysteamine. Crosslinking occurred during spinning via disulfide bond formation between thiol groups.
2. Fiber characterization with light microscopy and atomic force microscopy found uniform, beadless fibers with an average diameter of 88±30 nm, similar to collagen fibers. This nanofiber structure mimics the extracellular matrix and could support cell growth as a biodegradable scaffold.
3. The fibers have properties required for biomedical applications