4.7 Article

Photocrosslinkable gelatin/collagen based bioinspired polyurethane-acrylate bone adhesives with biocompatibility and biodegradability

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL MACROMOLECULES
Volume 192, Issue -, Pages 1344-1356

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2021.09.043

Keywords

Bone adhesive; Polyurethane-acrylate; Gelatin, collagen, UV-curing; Antibacterial activity; Biodegradability; Flexibility; Biocompatibility

Funding

  1. Scientific and Techno-logical Research Council of Turkey [116Z501]
  2. Inonu University [FDP-2018-1284]

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Hard or soft tissue adhesives are being developed as a promising replacement for traditional wound closure methods. By combining various components such as aliphatic isophorone diisocyanate, beta-cyclodextrin, proteins, and PEGs, a new adhesive with high adhesion strength, biocompatibility, and injectable properties has been created. This adhesive formulation shows strong potential for tissue engineering applications due to its excellent cell/tissue viability, fast curing, strong adhesion, high antibacterial properties, and injectability.
Hard or soft tissue adhesives have been presented as a promising candidate to replace traditional wound closure methods. However, there are mechanical strength problems in biological adhesives and biocompatibility problems in synthetic-based adhesives. At this point, we aimed to remove all these disadvantages and produce a single adhesive that contains all the necessary features and acrylate functionalized UV-curable polyurethane formulations were produced with high crosslink density, high adhesion strength, biocompatibility and injectable property for easy application as potential biomedical adhesives. Aliphatic isophorone diisocyanate (IPDI) was used as the isocyanate source and beta-cyclodextrin was used for host-guest relationship with gentamicin by crosslinking. Proteins (gelatin (GEL), collagen (COL)) and PEGs of various molecular weight ranges (P200, P400, P600) were selected as the polyol backbone for polyurethane synthesis due to their multiple biological activities such as biocompatibility, biodegradability, biomimetic property. Several techniques have been used to characterize the structural, thermal, morphological, and various other physicochemical properties of the adhesive formulations. Besides, the possibility of its use as a hard tissue adhesive was investigated by evaluating the tissue adhesion strength in vitro and ex vivo via a universal testing analyzer in tensile mode. Corresponding adhesive formulations were evaluated by in vitro and in vivo techniques for biocompatibility. The best adhesion strength results were obtained as 3821.0 +/- 214.9, and 3722.2 +/- 486.8 kPa, for IPDI-COL-P200 and IPDI-GEL-P200, respectively. Good antibacterial activity capability toward Escherichia coli Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Staphylococcus aureus were confirmed using disc diffusion method. Moreover, cell viability assay demonstrated that the formulations have no significant cytotoxicity on the L929 fibroblast cells. Most importantly, we finally performed the in vivo biodegradability and in vivo biocompatibility evaluations of the adhesive formulations on rat model. Considering their excellent cell/tissue viability, fast curable, strong adhesion, high antibacterial character, and injectability, these adhesive formulations have significant potential for tissue engineering applications.

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