4.7 Article

Stimuli-Responsive Hydrogels with Antibacterial Activity Assembled from Guanosine, Aminoglycoside, and a Bifunctional Anchor

Journal

ADVANCED HEALTHCARE MATERIALS
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/adhm.201901329

Keywords

aminoglycoside; antibacterial hydrogels; iminoboronate chemistry; smart hydrogels; stimuli responsiveness

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21725402, 51672191, 81871774]
  2. Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Commission [17XD1401600]
  3. ECNU Multifunctional Platform for Innovation [011]

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Multistimuli-responsive hydrogels with specific functions have attracted great interest for biomedical applications; however, these smart hydrogels usually require the presynthesis of macromolecular building blocks with multiple ligands and the integration of bioactive cargoes into the gels. Here, a multistimuli-responsive hydrogel with potent antibacterial activity by a combination of supramolecular assembly and iminoboronate chemistry is reported. The hydrogel consists of all-small-molecule building blocks including aminoglycoside, guanosine, potassium ion, and a bifunctional anchor bearing both boronic acid and aldehyde groups. Guanosines form quadruplexes in the presence of potassium ions via supramolecular assembly, and the bifunctional anchor connects aminoglycosides, a class of potent antibiotics to cis-diol groups on quadruplexes via dynamic iminoboronate chemistry, yielding a smart hydrogel containing abundant antibiotics. The hydrogel is sensitive to multistimuli such as heat, acids, oxidants, glucose and crown ether, which promote the release of antibiotics from the gels. Moreover, the prepared hydrogels show potent antibacterial activities both in vitro and in vivo. The results provide a new option to prepare antibacterial hydrogels with multistimuli responsiveness via facile chemistry using all-small-molecule building blocks.

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