Well-Defined Synthetic Copolymers with Pendant Aldehydes Form Biocompatible Strain-Stiffening Hydrogels and Enable Competitive Ligand Displacement

Ivo A. O. Beeren, Francis L. C. Morgan, Timo Rademakers, Jurica Bauer, Pieter J. Dijkstra, Lorenzo Moroni*, Matthew B. Baker*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Dynamic hydrogels are attractive platforms for tissue engineering and regenerative medicine due to their ability to mimic key extracellular matrix (ECM) mechanical properties like strain-stiffening and stress relaxation while enabling enhanced processing characteristics like injectability, 3D printing, and self-healing. Systems based on imine-type dynamic covalent chemistry (DCvC) have become increasingly popular. However, most reported polymers comprising aldehyde groups are based on either end-group-modified synthetic or side-chain-modified natural polymers; synthetic versions of side-chain-modified polymers are noticeably absent. To facilitate access to new classes of dynamic hydrogels, we report the straightforward synthesis of a water-soluble copolymer with a tunable fraction of pendant aldehyde groups (12-64%) using controlled radical polymerization and their formation into hydrogel biomaterials with dynamic cross-links. We found the polymer synthesis to be well-controlled with the determined reactivity ratios consistent with a blocky gradient microarchitecture. Subsequently, we observed fast gelation kinetics with imine-type cross-linking. We were able to vary hydrogel stiffness from ≈2 to 20 kPa, tune the onset of strain-stiffening toward a biologically relevant regime (σ c ≈ 10 Pa), and demonstrate cytocompatibility using human dermal fibroblasts. Moreover, to begin to mimic the dynamic biochemical nature of the native ECM, we highlight the potential for temporal modulation of ligands in our system to demonstrate ligand displacement along the copolymer backbone via competitive binding. The combination of highly tunable composition, stiffness, and strain-stiffening, in conjunction with spatiotemporal control of functionality, positions these cytocompatible copolymers as a powerful platform for the rational design of next-generation synthetic biomaterials.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)24330-24347
Number of pages18
JournalJournal of the American Chemical Society
Volume146
Issue number35
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 4 Sept 2024

Keywords

  • POLY(ETHYLENE GLYCOL)
  • RADICAL POLYMERIZATION
  • VISCOELASTICITY
  • POLYMERS

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