| Literature DB >> 27879635 |
Pariksha J Kondiah1, Yahya E Choonara2, Pierre P D Kondiah3, Thashree Marimuthu4, Pradeep Kumar5, Lisa C du Toit6, Viness Pillay7.
Abstract
Biodegradable, stimuli-responsive polymers are essential platforms in the field of drug delivery and injectable biomaterials for application of bone tissue engineering. Various thermo-responsive hydrogels display water-based homogenous properties to encapsulate, manipulate and transfer its contents to the surrounding tissue, in the least invasive manner. The success of bioengineered injectable tissue modified delivery systems depends significantly on their chemical, physical and biological properties. Irrespective of shape and defect geometry, injectable therapy has an unparalleled advantage in which intricate therapy sites can be effortlessly targeted with minimally invasive procedures. Using material testing, it was found that properties of stimuli-responsive hydrogel systems enhance cellular responses and cell distribution at any site prior to the transitional phase leading to gelation. The substantially hydrated nature allows significant simulation of the extracellular matrix (ECM), due to its similar structural properties. Significant current research strategies have been identified and reported to date by various institutions, with particular attention to thermo-responsive hydrogel delivery systems, and their pertinent focus for bone tissue engineering. Research on future perspective studies which have been proposed for evaluation, have also been reported in this review, directing considerable attention to the modification of delivering natural and synthetic polymers, to improve their biocompatibility and mechanical properties.Entities:
Keywords: biodegradable; drug delivery; hydrogels; stimuli-responsive; thermo-responsive polymers; tissue engineering
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27879635 PMCID: PMC6272998 DOI: 10.3390/molecules21111580
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Schematic representing the outlined procedure undertaken for tissue engineering and drug delivery (adapted with permission from Khan et al., 2015).
Figure 2Physical gelation system derived from increased temperature due to interaction of hydrophilic and hydrophobic blocks for promoting an amphiphilic polymer.
Figure 3Free radical polymerization steps involved in copolymerization techniques.
Figure 4Chemical structures of selected most commonly used thermo-responsive polymers discussed in application for drug and tissue engineering (adapted with permission from Matanovic et al., 2014.
Summary of injectable hydrogels for tissue engineering.
| Hydrogel Source | Polymer/s Used | Gelation Mechanism | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Natural | Hyaluronic acid, chitosan | Thermal/chemical/free radical crosslinking | [ |
| Cellulose, Agarose, Matrigel | Thermal crosslinking | [ | |
| Gelatin, Collagen | Thermal/chemical crosslinking | [ | |
| Synthetic | PDMA, PHPMA, PNVCL | ||
| PNIPAAm, Fibroin, PLA | |||
| NIPAAm/MBAAm | |||
| Oligolactide-(2-HEMA) | Thermal crosslinking | [ | |
| OligoLA-HEMA, L-Lysine | [ | ||
| PNIPAAm-Co-HEMA) | |||
| P(L-glutamic acid) | |||
| POEGMA, OEGMA, MEO2MA | ATRP crosslinking | [ | |
| Poly(organophosphazene) | |||
| a-amino-w-methoxypoly(ethylene glycol), lleoEt | Chemical crosslinking | [ | |
| PEO-PPO-PEO, mPEG-PCL | |||
| PEG, PGA, PLA, PCL, PLGA | Thermal crosslinking | [ | |
| PVL, DX, SMO, PCLLA | [ |
Figure 5Schematic representation of tissue engineering application, delivering drug-loaded thermo-sensitive polymers with bioactive signals.