Elastomeric, bioadhesive and pH-responsive amphiphilic copolymers based on direct crosslinking of poly(glycerol sebacate)--polyethylene glycol.

Biomater Sci

Biomaterials and Tissue Engineering Group, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Kroto Research Institute, The University of Sheffield, Sheffield S3 7HQ, UK.

Published: December 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Poly(glycerol sebacate) (PGS) is a synthetic biorubber known for its flexibility and biocompatibility but struggles with water solubility, limiting its use in hydrogels.
  • A new type of PGS-based hydrophilic copolymer was created by combining PGS with different ratios of polyethylene glycol, allowing for easy hydrogel formation through simple thermal crosslinking.
  • These copolymers exhibited excellent properties like high swelling, flexibility, and pH responsiveness, making them promising candidates for applications in soft tissue engineering and biomedicine.

Article Abstract

Poly(glycerol sebacate) (PGS), a synthetic biorubber, is characterised by its biocompatibility, high elasticity and tunable mechanical properties; however, its inherent hydrophobicity and insolubility in water make it unsuitable for use in advanced biomaterials like hydrogels fabrication. Here, we developed new hydrophilic PGS-based copolymers that enable hydrogel formation through use of two different types of polyethylene glycol (PEG), polyethylene glycol (PEG2) or glycerol ethoxylate (PEG3), combined at different ratios. A two-step polycondensation reaction was used to produce poly(glycerol sebacate)--polyethylene glycol (PGS--PEG) copolymers that were then crosslinked thermally without the use of initiators or crosslinkers, resulting in PGS--PEG2 and PGS--PEG3 amphiphilic polymers. It has been illustrated that the properties of PGS--PEG copolymers can be controlled by altering the type and amount of PEG. PGS--PEG copolymers containing PEG ≥ 40% showed high swelling, flexibility, stretching, bioadhesion and biocompatibility, and good enzymatic degradation and mechanical properties. Also, the addition of PEG created hydrogels that demonstrated pH-responsive behaviours, which can be used for bioapplications requiring responding to physicochemical dynamics. Interestingly, PGS--40PEG2 and PGS--60PEG3 had the highest shear strengths, 340.4 ± 49.7 kPa and 336.0 ± 35.1 kPa, and these are within the range of commercially available sealants or bioglues. Due to the versatile multifunctionalities of these new copolymer hydrogels, they can have great potential in soft tissue engineering and biomedicine.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9724602PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2bm01335eDOI Listing

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