| Literature DB >> 29336146 |
Kaerdun Liu1, Shihao Zang1, Rongrong Xue1, Jinghui Yang2, Lizhi Wang2, Jianbin Huang1, Yun Yan1.
Abstract
Printable hydrogels desired in bioengineering have extremely high demands on biocompatibility and mechanic strength, which can hardly be achieved in conventional hydrogels made with biopolymers. Here, we show that on employment of the strategy of coordination-triggered hierarchical self-assembly of naturally occurring small-molecule folic acid, supramolecular hydrogels with robust mechanical elastic modulus comparable to synthetic double-network polymer gels can be made at concentrations below 1%. A sequence of hierarchical steps are involved in the formation of this extraordinary hydrogel: petrin rings on folate form tetramers through hydrogen bonding, tetramers stack into nanofibers by π-π stacking, and zinc ions cross-link the nanofibers into larger-scale fibrils and further cross-link the fibril network to gel water. These supramolecular qualities endow the hydrogel with shear-thinning and instant healing ability, which makes the robust gel injectable and printable into various three-dimensional structures. Owing to the excellent biocompatibility, the gel can support cells three-dimensionally and can be used as an ideal carrier for imaging agent (Gd3+), as well as chemodrugs. In combination with its easy formation and abundant sources, this newly discovered metallo-folate supramolecular hydrogel is promising in various bioengineering technological applications.Entities:
Keywords: bioprinting; coordination; folic acid; hierarchical assembly; injectable hydrogels
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29336146 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.7b18155
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229