| Literature DB >> 24993802 |
Ryan J Seelbach1, Peter Fransen2, Marianna Peroglio3, Daniel Pulido4, Patricia Lopez-Chicon5, Fabian Duttenhoefer6, Sebastian Sauerbier6, Thomas Freiman7, Philipp Niemeyer6, Carlos Semino5, Fernando Albericio2, Mauro Alini3, Miriam Royo4, Alvaro Mata8, David Eglin9.
Abstract
The controlled presentation of biofunctionality is of key importance for hydrogel applications in cell-based regenerative medicine. Here, a versatile approach was demonstrated to present clustered binding epitopes in an injectable, thermoresponsive hydrogel. Well-defined multivalent dendrimers bearing four integrin binding sequences and an azido moiety were covalently grafted to propargylamine-derived hyaluronic acid (Hyal-pa) using copper-catalyzed alkyne-azide cycloaddition (CuAAC), and then combined with pN-modified hyaluronan (Hyal-pN). The dendrimers were prepared by synthesizing a bifunctional diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid core with azido and NHBoc oligo(ethylene glycol) aminoethyl branches, then further conjugated with solid-phase synthesized RGDS and DGRS peptides. Azido terminated pN was synthesized by reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer polymerization and reacted to Hyal-pa via CuAAC. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), high performance liquid chromatography, size exclusion chromatography and mass spectroscopy proved that the dendrimers had well-defined size and were disubstituted. NMR and atomic absorption analysis confirmed the hyaluronan was affixed with dendrimers or pN. Rheological measurements demonstrated that dendrimers do not influence the elastic or viscous moduli of thermoresponsive hyaluronan compositions at a relevant biological concentration. Finally, human mesenchymal stromal cells were encapsulated in the biomaterial and cultured for 21days, demonstrating the faculty of this dendrimer-modified hydrogel as a molecular toolbox for tailoring the biofunctionality of thermoresponsive hyaluronan carriers for biomedical applications.Entities:
Keywords: Engineered microenvironments; Human mesenchymal stem cells; Hyaluronan; Injectable hydrogels; Multivalent dendrimers
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24993802 DOI: 10.1016/j.actbio.2014.06.028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Biomater ISSN: 1742-7061 Impact factor: 8.947