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Proteolytically Degradable Photo‐Polymerized Hydrogels Made From PEG–Fibrinogen Adducts
Author(s) -
Dikovsky Daniel,
BiancoPeled Havazelet,
Seliktar Dror
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
advanced engineering materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.938
H-Index - 114
eISSN - 1527-2648
pISSN - 1438-1656
DOI - 10.1002/adem.200980054
Subject(s) - polymerization , polymer chemistry , peg ratio , polymer , self healing hydrogels , covalent bond , conjugated system , steric effects , radical polymerization , materials science , chemistry , ethylene glycol , polymer architecture , organic chemistry , finance , economics
We develop a biomaterial based on protein–polymer conjugates where poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) polymer chains are covalently linked to multiple thiols on denatured fibrinogen. We hypothesize that conjugation of large diacrylate‐functionalized linear PEG chains to fibrinogen could govern the molecular architecture of the polymer network via a unique protein–polymer interaction. The hypothesis is explored using carefully designed shear rheometry and swelling experiments of the hydrogels and their precursor PEG/fibrinogen conjugate solutions. The physical properties of non‐cross‐linked and UV cross‐linked PEGylated fibrinogen having PEG molecular weights ranging from 10 to 20 kDa are specifically investigated. Attaching multiple hydrophilic, functionalized PEG chains to the denatured fibrinogen solubilizes the denatured protein and enables a rapid free‐radical polymerization cross‐linking reaction in the hydrogel precursor solution. As expected, the conjugated protein‐polymer macromolecular complexes act to mediate the interactions between radicals and unsaturated bonds during the free‐radical polymerization reaction, when compared to control PEG hydrogels. Accordingly, the cross‐linking kinetics and stiffness of the cross‐linked hydrogel are highly influenced by the protein–polymer conjugate architecture and molecular entanglements arising from hydrophobic/hydrophilic interactions and steric hindrances. The proteolytic degradation products of the protein–polymer conjugates proves to be were different from those of the non‐conjugated denatured protein degradation products, indicating that steric hindrances may alter the proteolytic susceptibility of the PEG–protein adduct. A more complete understanding of the molecular complexities associated with this type of protein‐polymer conjugation can help to identify the full potential of a biomaterial that combines the advantages of synthetic polymers and bioactive proteins.

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