Temperature-Responsive Aldehyde Hydrogels with Injectable, Self-Healing, and Tunable Mechanical Properties

Injectable and self-healing hydrogels with exemplary biocompatibility and tunable mechanical properties are urgently needed due to their significant advantages for tissue engineering applications. Here, we report a new temperature-responsive aldehyde hydrogel with dual physical-cross-linked networks...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biomacromolecules 2022-06, Vol.23 (6), p.2552-2561
Hauptverfasser: Zhao, Jianyang, Peng, Yi-Yang, Wang, Jinquan, Diaz-Dussan, Diana, Tian, Wendy, Duan, Wei, Kong, Lingxue, Hao, Xiaojuan, Narain, Ravin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Injectable and self-healing hydrogels with exemplary biocompatibility and tunable mechanical properties are urgently needed due to their significant advantages for tissue engineering applications. Here, we report a new temperature-responsive aldehyde hydrogel with dual physical-cross-linked networks and injectable and self-healing properties prepared from an ABA-type triblock copolymer, poly­{[FPMA­(4-formylphenyl methacrylate)-co-DEGMA­[di­(ethylene glycol) methyl ether methacrylate]-b-MPC­(2-methacryloyloxyethyl phosphorylcholine)-b-(FPMA-co-DEGMA)}. The thermoresponsive poly­(DEGMA) segments drive the dehydration and hydrophobic interaction, enabling polymer chain winding as the first cross-linking network, when the temperature is raised above the critical gelation temperature. Meanwhile, the benzaldehyde groups offer physical interactions, including hydrogen bonding and hydrophobic and π–π stacking interactions as the second cross-linking network. When increasing the benzaldehyde content in the triblock copolymers from 0 to 8.2 mol %, the critical gelation temperature of the resulted hydrogels dropped from 35.5 to 19.9 °C and the mechanical modulus increased from 21 to 1411 Pa. Owing to the physical-cross-linked networks, the hydrogel demonstrated excellent injectability and self-healing properties. The cell viabilities tested from MTT assays toward both normal lung fibroblast cells (MRC-5) and cancerous cervical (HeLa) cells were found to be 100 and 101%, respectively, for varying polymer concentrations up to 1 mg/mL. The 3D cell encapsulation of the hydrogels was evaluated by a cytotoxicity Live/Dead assay, showing 92% cell viability. With these attractive physiochemical and biological properties, this temperature-responsive aldehyde hydrogel can be a promising candidate as a cell scaffold for tissue engineering.
ISSN:1525-7797
1526-4602
DOI:10.1021/acs.biomac.2c00260