4.8 Review

A review of glycosaminoglycan-modified electrically conductive polymers for biomedical applications

Journal

ACTA BIOMATERIALIA
Volume 169, Issue -, Pages 45-65

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.actbio.2023.07.054

Keywords

Electrically conductive polymers; Glycosaminoglycans; Biocompatibility; In vitro; In vivo

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This review comprehensively summarizes recent research on glycosaminoglycan-modified electrically conductive polymers for biomedical applications. It discusses the effect of different biological dopants on material characteristics and summarizes the key findings of biological characterization in vitro and in vivo. The remaining challenges in the field are also discussed.
The application areas of electrically conductive polymers have been steadily growing since their discovery in the late 1970s. Recently, electrically conductive polymers have found their way into biomedicine, allowing the realization of many relevant applications ranging from bioelectronics to scaffolds f or tis -sue engineering. Extracellular matrix components, such as glycosaminoglycans, build an important class of biomaterials that are heavily researched for biomedical applications due to their favorable properties. Due to their highly anionic character and the presence of sulfate groups in glycosaminoglycans, these biomolecules can be employed to functionalize conductive polymers, which enables the tailorability and improvement of cell-material interactions of conductive polymers. This review paper gives an overview of recent research on glycosaminoglycan-modified conductive polymers intended for biomedical applications and discusses the effect of different biological dopants on material characteristics, such as surface rough-ness, stiffness, and electrochemical properties. Moreover, the key findings of the biological characterization in vitro and in vivo are summarized, and remaining challenges in the field, particularly related to the modification of electrically conductive polymers with glycosaminoglycans to achieve improved functional and biological outcomes, are discussed.Statement of significance The development of functional biomaterials based on electrically conductive polymers (CPs) for various biomedical applications, such as neural regeneration, drug delivery, or bioelectronics, has been increasingly investigated over the last decades. Recent literature has shown that changes in the synthesis procedure or the chosen dopant could adjust the resulting material characteristics. Hence, an interesting approach lies in using natural biomolecules as dopants for CPs to tailor the biological outcome. This review comprehensively summarizes the state of the art in the field of glycosaminoglycan-modified electrically conductive polymers for the first time, particularly highlighting the effect of the chosen dopant on mate-rial characteristics, such as surface morphology or stiffness, electrochemical properties, and consequently, cell-material interactions.(c) 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of Acta Materialia Inc. This is an open access article under the CC BY license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ )

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