4.7 Article

Interpenetrated Biosurfactant-Biopolymer Orthogonal Hydrogels: The Biosurfactant's Phase Controls the Hydrogel's Mechanics

Journal

BIOMACROMOLECULES
Volume 24, Issue 1, Pages 33-42

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biomac.2c00319

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In this study, hybrid hydrogels with controllable viscoelastic properties were developed by mixing biopolymers and microbial glycolipid bioamphiphiles. It was found that the bioamphiphiles exhibited different phases at different pH values, which had an impact on the elastic properties of the hydrogels. These hybrid hydrogels not only had biocompatibility and a natural origin, but also had a complex and stable structure.
Controlling the viscoelastic properties of hydrogels is a challenge for many applications. Low molecular weight gelators (LMWGs) like bile salts and glycolipids and biopolymers like chitosan and alginate are good candidates for developing fully biobased hybrid hydrogels that combine the advantages of both components. Biopolymers lead to enhanced mechanics, while LMWGs add functionality. In this work, hybrid hydrogels are composed of biopolymers (gelatin, chitosan, and alginate) and microbial glycolipid bioamphiphiles, known as biosurfactants. Besides their biocompatibility and natural origin, bioamphiphiles can present chameleonic behavior, as pH and ions control their phase diagram in water around neutrality under strongly diluted conditions (<5 wt%). The glycolipid used in this work behaves like a surfactant (micellar phase) at high pH or like a phospholipid (vesicle phase) at low pH. Moreover, at neutral-to-alkaline pH in the presence of calcium, it behaves like a gelator (fiber phase). The impact of each of these phases on the elastic properties of biopolymers is explored by means of oscillatory rheology, while the hybrid structure is studied by small angle X-ray scattering. The micellar and vesicular phases reduce the elastic properties of the hydrogels, while the fiber phase has the opposite effect; it enhances the hydrogel's strength by forming an interpenetrated biopolymer-LMWG network.

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