volume 53 pages 100-108

High-water-content and resilient PEG-containing hydrogels with low fibrotic response

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2017-04-01
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR2.007
CiteScore17.8
Impact factor9.6
ISSN17427061, 18787568
Biochemistry
Molecular Biology
General Medicine
Biotechnology
Biomaterials
Biomedical Engineering
Abstract
Hydrogels such as those based on polyethylene glycol (PEG) are broadly used in biomedicine where high water contents, robust mechanical properties such as resilience and favorable interactions with the body are often simultaneously desirable. However, the mechanical properties of conventional hydrogels often degrade rapidly after swelling or with increasing water content, limiting their potential in many applications. Here we describe a new class of PEG-containing hydrogels that remain highly resilient after maximum swelling. We achieved the hydrogels by incorporating reversible "dual" hydrogen bonding into highly coiled, elastic PEG networks. These hydrogels, due to their high water content and high mechanical resilience, can form highly permeable, yet durable and easy-to-handle cell delivery devices without any additional structural support. In addition, optimization of chemical composition resulted in hydrogels with superior bio-inertness, inducing much less fibrosis upon subcutaneous implantation in mice than a polyhydroxyethylmethacrylate (PHEMA) hydrogel control.Hydrogels such as polyethylene glycol (PEG)-based ones are broadly used in the biomedical world. Examples include wound dressings, tissue scaffolds, medical implants, biosensors and drug or cell delivery devices. In many of these applications, robust mechanical property, high water content (or facile mass transfer) and favorable interactions with the body are often simultaneously desirable. However, the mechanical property of hydrogels often degrades rapidly after swelling or with increasing water content. Here we report a new class of PEG-based hydrogels that simultaneously possess high water content, high mechanical resilience and low fibrotic response upon subcutaneous implantation in mice. These hydrogels may therefore find broad applications in biomedicine.
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GOST |
Cite this
GOST Copy
Zhang Yu. et al. High-water-content and resilient PEG-containing hydrogels with low fibrotic response // Acta Biomaterialia. 2017. Vol. 53. pp. 100-108.
GOST all authors (up to 50) Copy
Zhang Yu., An D., Pardo Y., Chiu A., Song W., Liu Q., Zhou F., MCDONOUGH S. P., Ma M. High-water-content and resilient PEG-containing hydrogels with low fibrotic response // Acta Biomaterialia. 2017. Vol. 53. pp. 100-108.
RIS |
Cite this
RIS Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1016/j.actbio.2017.02.028
UR - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2017.02.028
TI - High-water-content and resilient PEG-containing hydrogels with low fibrotic response
T2 - Acta Biomaterialia
AU - Zhang, Yu
AU - An, Duo
AU - Pardo, Yehudah
AU - Chiu, Alan
AU - Song, Wei
AU - Liu, Qingsheng
AU - Zhou, Fang
AU - MCDONOUGH, SEAN P.
AU - Ma, Minglin
PY - 2017
DA - 2017/04/01
PB - Elsevier
SP - 100-108
VL - 53
PMID - 28216297
SN - 1742-7061
SN - 1878-7568
ER -
BibTex
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors) Copy
@article{2017_Zhang,
author = {Yu Zhang and Duo An and Yehudah Pardo and Alan Chiu and Wei Song and Qingsheng Liu and Fang Zhou and SEAN P. MCDONOUGH and Minglin Ma},
title = {High-water-content and resilient PEG-containing hydrogels with low fibrotic response},
journal = {Acta Biomaterialia},
year = {2017},
volume = {53},
publisher = {Elsevier},
month = {apr},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2017.02.028},
pages = {100--108},
doi = {10.1016/j.actbio.2017.02.028}
}