4.7 Article

pH-Responsive, Thermo-Resistant Poly(Acrylic Acid)-g-Poly(boc-L-Lysine) Hydrogel with Shear-Induced Injectability

Journal

GELS
Volume 8, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/gels8120817

Keywords

hydrogel; poly(acrylic acid)-g-poly(boc-l-lysine); hydrophobic association; frozen network; shear-induced injectability; self-healing; pH responsiveness

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In this study, the rheological behavior of a graft copolymer solution that self-assembles into a hydrogel network was investigated. The copolymer showed strong elasticity and self-healing properties. The stiffness and swelling of the hydrogel could be controlled by adjusting pH conditions. The hydrogel exhibited excellent injectability and instantaneous self-healing, making it a potential candidate for various biomedical applications.
In this study we report the rheological behavior of aqueous solutions of an amphiphilic graft copolymer constituting a polyacrylic acid (PAA) grafted by poly(boc-L-lysine), P(b-LL). Due to the highly hydrophobic nature of the grafted chains, the copolymer self-assembles spontaneously in aqueous media forming three-dimensional (3D) finite size networks (microgels). The rheological analysis demonstrated that the copolymer behaves as a strong elastic hydrogel, showing characteristics of a frozen network. Moreover, it is noteworthy that the formulation shows the above-described characteristics in very small concentrations (0.25-1.20 wt%) compared to other naturally cross-linked hydrogels that have been studied so far. Concentration significantly affects the rheological properties of the hydrogel, showing considerable increase in elastic modulus, following the scaling law G'similar to C-1.93. At the same time, the hydrogels can be described as intelligent stimuli-responsive systems, showing pH and shear responsiveness as well as stability with temperature changes. Thanks to the pH dependance of the degree of ionization of the weak polyelectrolyte PAA backbone, stiffness and swelling of the hydrogels can be tuned effectively by adjusting the pH conditions. Simulating conditions such as those of injection through a 28-gauge syringe needle, the gel demonstrates excellent response to shear, due to its remarkable shear thinning behavior. The combination of pH-sensitivity and shear responsiveness leads to excellent injectability and self-healing properties, given that it flows easily upon applying a low stress and recovers instantly in the site of injection. Therefore, the physically cross-linked PAA-g-P(b-LL) hydrogel exhibits remarkable features, namely biocompatibility, biodegradability of cross-links, pH responsiveness, shear-induced injectability and instantaneous self-healing, making it a potential candidate for various biomedical applications.

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