Lactose-modified chitosan (CTL) is sulfated using SO·py or SO·DMF as sulfating agents. The two products are characterized by elemental analysis, FT-IR, H,C-DEPT-HSQC and H,C-HSQC-TOCSY experiments which allow the extent and selectivity of chemical sulfation to be determined. Dynamic Light Scattering shows a pH-dependent association of the sulfated polysaccharides which are described as flexible by the Smidsrød's B parameter and the intrinsic viscosity at infinite ionic strength. Shear viscosity and intrinsic viscosity show that sulfation protocols lead to chain scission which is more pronounced when SO·DMF is used. The sulfated samples are able to induce aggregation of human bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells, resulting in the formation of smaller nodules compared to the unmodified CTL sample. Over time, the sample with the higher degree of sulfation allows further aggregation between cell clusters while the sample with the lower degree of sulfation shows dissolution of the aggregates.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.carbpol.2022.119379DOI Listing

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