Premium
Rationally Designed Dynamic Protein Hydrogels with Reversibly Tunable Mechanical Properties
Author(s) -
Kong Na,
Peng Qing,
Li Hongbin
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
advanced functional materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.069
H-Index - 322
eISSN - 1616-3028
pISSN - 1616-301X
DOI - 10.1002/adfm.201402205
Subject(s) - self healing hydrogels , materials science , folding (dsp implementation) , protein folding , conformational change , nanotechnology , biophysics , redox , dynamic mechanical analysis , protein engineering , chemistry , polymer chemistry , composite material , polymer , biochemistry , engineering , electrical engineering , metallurgy , biology , enzyme
Protein hydrogels have attracted considerable interest due to their potential applications in biomedical engineering. Creating protein hydrogels with dynamic mechanical properties is challenging. Here, the engineering of a novel, rationally designed protein‐hydrogel is reported that translates molecular level protein folding‐unfolding conformational changes into macroscopic reversibly tunable mechanical properties based on a redox controlled protein folding‐unfolding switch. This novel protein folding switch is constructed from a designed mutually exclusive protein. Via oxidation and reduction of an engineered disulfide bond, the protein folding switch can switch its conformation between folded and unfolded states, leading to a drastic change of protein's effective chain length and mechanical compliance. This redox‐responsive protein can be readily photochemically crosslinked into solid hydrogels, in which molecular level conformational changes (folding‐unfolding) can result in significant macroscopic changes in hydrogel's physical and mechanical properties due to the change of the effective chain length between two crosslinking points in the protein hydrogel network. It is found that when reduced, the hydrogel swells and is mechanically compliant; when oxidized, it swells to a less extent and becomes resilient and stiffer, exhibiting an up to fivefold increase in its Young's modulus. The changes of the mechanical and physical properties of this hydrogel are fully reversible and can be cycled using redox potential. This novel protein hydrogel with dynamic mechanical and physical properties could find numerous applications in material sciences and tissue engineering.