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Tunable Keratin Hydrogels for Controlled Erosion and Growth Factor Delivery
- Publication Year :
- 2015
-
Abstract
- Tunable erosion of polymeric materials is an important aspect of tissue engineering for reasons that include cell infiltration, controlled release of therapeutic agents, and ultimately to tissue healing. In general, the biological response to proteinaceous polymeric hydrogels is favorable (e.g., minimal inflammatory response). However, unlike synthetic polymers, achieving tunable erosion with natural materials is a challenge. Keratins are a class of intermediate filament proteins that can be obtained from several sources, including human hair, and have gained increasing levels of use in tissue engineering applications. An important characteristic of keratin proteins is the presence of a large number of cysteine residues. Two classes of keratins with different chemical properties can be obtained by varying the extraction techniques: (1) keratose by oxidative extraction and (2) kerateine by reductive extraction. Cysteine residues of keratose are "capped" by sulfonic acid and are unable to form covalent cross-links upon hydration, whereas cysteine residues of kerateine remain as sulfhydryl groups and spontaneously form covalent disulfide cross-links. Here, we describe a straightforward approach to fabricate keratin hydrogels with tunable rates of erosion by mixing keratose and kerateine. SEM imaging and mechanical testing of freeze-dried materials showed similar pore diameters and compressive moduli, respectively, for each keratose-kerateine mixture formulation (∼1200 kPa for freeze-dried materials and ∼1.5 kPa for hydrogels). However, the elastic modulus (G') determined by rheology varied in proportion with the keratose-kerateine ratios, as did the rate of hydrogel erosion and the release rate of thiol from the hydrogels. The variation in keratose-kerateine ratios also led to tunable control over release rates of recombinant human insulin-like growth factor 1.
- Subjects :
- Polymers and Plastics
0206 medical engineering
Bioengineering
Biocompatible Materials
02 engineering and technology
macromolecular substances
Article
Biomaterials
Tissue engineering
Elastic Modulus
Keratin
Polymer chemistry
Materials Testing
Materials Chemistry
Humans
Insulin-Like Growth Factor I
chemistry.chemical_classification
Tissue Engineering
technology, industry, and agriculture
Hydrogels
Polymer
021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology
020601 biomedical engineering
Controlled release
chemistry
Chemical engineering
Covalent bond
Self-healing hydrogels
Thiol
Keratins
0210 nano-technology
Cysteine
Hair
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....51e87017a867394d65853c33478e0fae