Literature DB >> 15530047

Light-activated immobilization of biomolecules to agarose hydrogels for controlled cellular response.

Ying Luo1, Molly S Shoichet.   

Abstract

We describe a new method of synthesizing photolabile hydrogel materials for convenient photoimmobilization of biomolecules on surfaces or in 3-D matrixes. Dissolved agarose was modified with photolabile S-(2-nitrobenzyl)cysteine (S-NBC) via 1,1'-carbonyldiimidazole (CDI) activation of primary hydroxyl groups. S-NBC-modified agarose remained soluble and gelable with up to 5% S-NBC substitution, yet gelation was slower and the elastic modulus of the resulting gel was lower than those of unmodified agarose. Irradiating S-NBC-grafted agarose resulted in the loss of the protecting 2-nitrobenzyl groups, thereby exposing free sulfhydryl groups for biomolecular coupling. When appropriately activated with sulfhydryl-reactive groups, either peptides or proteins were effectively immobilized to the photoirradiated hydrogel matrixes, with the irradiation energy dose (i.e., irradiation time) used to control the amount of biomolecule immobilization. When the GRGDS peptide was immobilized on agarose, it was shown to be cell-adhesive and to promote neurite outgrowth from primary, embryonic chick dorsal root ganglion neurons. The immobilized GRGDS surface ligand concentration affected the cellular response: neurite length and density increased with GRGDS surface concentration at low adhesion ligand concentration and then plateaued at higher GRGDS concentration. Grafting 2-nitrobenzyl-protected compounds to hydrogel materials is useful for creating new photolabile hydrogel substrates for light-activated functional group generation and biomolecular immobilization.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15530047     DOI: 10.1021/bm0495811

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biomacromolecules        ISSN: 1525-7797            Impact factor:   6.988


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8.  Cryotemplation for the Rapid Fabrication of Porous, Patternable Photopolymerized Hydrogels.

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9.  Synthesis of photodegradable macromers for conjugation and release of bioactive molecules.

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10.  Polymeric Biomaterials: Diverse Functions Enabled by Advances in Macromolecular Chemistry.

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