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Controllable Fibrillization Reinforces Genetically Engineered Rubberlike Protein Hydrogels. | LitMetric

Controllable Fibrillization Reinforces Genetically Engineered Rubberlike Protein Hydrogels.

Biomacromolecules

State Key Laboratory of Microbial Metabolism, Joint International Research Laboratory of Metabolic & Developmental Sciences, and School of Life Sciences and Biotechnology, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, 800 Dongchuan Road, Shanghai 200240, People's Republic of China.

Published: February 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Rubberlike protein hydrogels are stretchy and resilient but often lack strength due to disorganized protein chains, limiting their use.
  • The text proposes a novel strategy using engineered protein copolymers that combine photo-cross-linkable resilin-like blocks with fibrillizable silklike blocks to enhance the strength of these hydrogels.
  • This method allows for controlled fibrillization and reinforcement at both the supramolecular and material levels, resulting in stronger hydrogels suitable for applications like piezoresistive sensors that can detect a wider range of pressure.

Article Abstract

Rubberlike protein hydrogels are unique in their remarkable stretchability and resilience but are usually low in strength due to the largely unstructured nature of the constitutive protein chains, which limits their applications. Thus, reinforcing protein hydrogels while retaining their rubberlike properties is of great interest and has remained difficult to achieve. Here, we propose a fibrillization strategy to reinforce hydrogels from engineered protein copolymers with photo-cross-linkable resilin-like blocks and fibrillizable silklike blocks. First, the designer copolymers with an increased ratio of the silk to resilin blocks were photochemically cross-linked into rubberlike hydrogels with reinforced mechanical properties. The increased silk-to-resilin ratio also enabled self-assembly of the resulting copolymers into fibrils in a time-dependent manner. This allowed controllable fibrillization of the copolymer solutions at the supramolecular level for subsequent photo-cross-linking into reinforced hydrogels. Alternatively, the as-prepared chemically cross-linked hydrogels could be reinforced at the material level by inducing fibrillization of the constitutive protein chains. Finally, we demonstrated the advantage of reinforcing these hydrogels for use as piezoresistive sensors to achieve an expanded pressure detection range. We anticipate that this strategy may provide intriguing opportunities to generate robust rubberlike biomaterials for broad applications.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.biomac.0c01653DOI Listing

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