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Facile Physicochemical Reprogramming of PEG-Dithiolane Microgels.

Authors :
Nelson BR
Kirkpatrick BE
Skillin NP
Di Caprio N
Lee JS
Hibbard LP
Hach GK
Khang A
White TJ
Burdick JA
Bowman CN
Anseth KS
Source :
Advanced healthcare materials [Adv Healthc Mater] 2024 Oct; Vol. 13 (25), pp. e2302925. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Nov 27.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Granular biomaterials have found widespread applications in tissue engineering, in part because of their inherent porosity, tunable properties, injectability, and 3D printability. However, the assembly of granular hydrogels typically relies on spherical microparticles and more complex particle geometries have been limited in scope, often requiring templating of individual microgels by microfluidics or in-mold polymerization. Here, we use dithiolane-functionalized synthetic macromolecules to fabricate photopolymerized microgels via batch emulsion, and then harness the dynamic disulfide crosslinks to rearrange the network. Through unconfined compression between parallel plates in the presence of photoinitiated radicals, we transform the isotropic microgels are transformed into disks. Characterizing this process, we find that the areas of the microgel surface in contact with the compressive plates are flattened while the curvature of the uncompressed microgel boundaries increases. When cultured with C2C12 myoblasts, cells localize to regions of higher curvature on the disk-shaped microgel surfaces. This altered localization affects cell-driven construction of large supraparticle scaffold assemblies, with spherical particles assembling without specific junction structure while disk microgels assemble preferentially on their curved surfaces. These results represent a unique spatiotemporal process for rapid reprocessing of microgels into anisotropic shapes, providing new opportunities to study shape-driven mechanobiological cues during and after granular hydrogel assembly.<br /> (© 2023 Wiley‐VCH GmbH.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2192-2659
Volume :
13
Issue :
25
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Advanced healthcare materials
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37984810
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/adhm.202302925