Biodegradable hyaluronic acid hydrogels to control release of dexamethasone through aqueous Diels-Alder chemistry for adipose tissue engineering

被引:76
|
作者
Fan, Ming [1 ]
Ma, Ye [1 ]
Zhang, Ziwei [1 ]
Mao, Jiahui [1 ]
Tan, Huaping [1 ]
Hu, Xiaohong [2 ]
机构
[1] Nanjing Univ Sci & Technol, Sch Mat Sci & Engn, Nanjing 210094, Jiangsu, Peoples R China
[2] Jinling Inst Technol, Sch Mat Engn, Nanjing, Jiangsu, Peoples R China
来源
MATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING C-MATERIALS FOR BIOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS | 2015年 / 56卷
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Hyaluronic acid; Injectable hydrogel; Cell scaffold; Drug delivery; Tissue engineering; CELL-AGGREGATION; CLICK CHEMISTRY; DRUG-DELIVERY; STEM-CELLS; SCAFFOLD; DIFFERENTIATION; NETWORKS; REGENERATION; CHITOSAN; DESIGN;
D O I
10.1016/j.msec.2015.04.004
中图分类号
TB3 [工程材料学]; R318.08 [生物材料学];
学科分类号
0805 ; 080501 ; 080502 ;
摘要
A robust synthetic strategy of biopolymer-based hydrogels has been developed where hyaluronic acid derivatives reacted through aqueous Diels-Alder chemistry without the involvement of chemical catalysts, allowing for control and sustain release of dexamethasone. To conjugate the hydrogel, furan and maleimide functionalized hyaluronic acid were synthesized, respectively, as well as furan functionalized dexamethasone, for the covalent immobilization. Chemical structure, gelation time, morphologies, swelling kinetics, weight loss, compressive modulus and dexamethasone release of the hydrogel system in PBS at 37 degrees C were studied. The results demonstrated that the aqueous Diels-Alder chemistry provides an extremely selective reaction and proceeds with high efficiency for hydrogel conjugation and covalent immobilization of dexamethasone. Cell culture results showed that the dexamethasone immobilized hydrogel was noncytotoxic and preserved proliferation of entrapped human adipose-derived stem cells. This synthetic approach uniquely allows for the direct fabrication of biologically functionalized gel scaffolds with ideal structures for adipose tissue engineering, which provides a competitive alternative to conventional conjugation techniques such as copper mediated click chemistry. (C) 2015 Published by Elsevier B.V.
引用
收藏
页码:311 / 317
页数:7
相关论文
共 36 条
  • [31] High-throughput generation of hyaluronic acid microgels via microfluidics-assisted enzymatic crosslinking and/or Diels-Alder click chemistry for cell encapsulation and delivery
    Ma, Ting
    Gao, Xijie
    Dong, Hua
    He, Huimin
    Cao, Xiaodong
    APPLIED MATERIALS TODAY, 2017, 9 : 49 - 59
  • [32] In Situ Forming, Silanized Hyaluronic Acid Hydrogels with Fine Control Over Mechanical Properties and In Vivo Degradation for Tissue Engineering Applications
    Flegeau, Killian
    Toquet, Claire
    Rethore, Gildas
    D'Arros, Cyril
    Messager, Lea
    Halgand, Boris
    Dupont, Davy
    Autrusseau, Florent
    Lesoeur, Julie
    Veziers, Joelle
    Bordat, Pascal
    Bresin, Anthony
    Guicheux, Jerome
    Delplace, Vianney
    Gautier, Helene
    Weiss, Pierre
    ADVANCED HEALTHCARE MATERIALS, 2020, 9 (19)
  • [33] Cross-Linked Hydrogels Formed through Diels-Alder Coupling of Furan- and Maleimide-Modified Poly(methyl vinyl ether-alt-maleic acid)
    Stewart, S. Alison
    Backholm, Matilda
    Burke, Nicholas A. D.
    Stoever, Harald D. H.
    LANGMUIR, 2016, 32 (07) : 1863 - 1870
  • [34] Injectable PNIPAM/Hyaluronic acid hydrogels containing multipurpose modified particles for cartilage tissue engineering: Synthesis, characterization, drug release and cell culture study
    Atoufi, Zhaleh
    Kamrava, Seyed Kamran
    Davachi, Seyed Mohammad
    Hassanabadi, Majid
    Garakani, Sadaf Saeedi
    Alizaleh, Rafieh
    Farhadi, Mohammad
    Tavakol, Shima
    Bagher, Zohreh
    Motlagh, Ghodratollah Hashemi
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL MACROMOLECULES, 2019, 139 : 1168 - 1181
  • [35] Lantech .3. Lewis acid-catalyzed reactions in protic media. Lanthanide-catalyzed aqueous aza Diels-Alder reactions in carbohydrate chemistry.
    Li, J
    Yu, LB
    Chen, DP
    Wang, PG
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 1996, 212 : 413 - ORGN