4.8 Article

Covalently Adaptable Elastin-Like Protein-Hyaluronic Acid (ELP-HA) Hybrid Hydrogels with Secondary Thermoresponsive Crosslinking for Injectable Stem Cell Delivery

Journal

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
Volume 27, Issue 28, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adfm.201605609

Keywords

dynamic covalent chemistry; elastin-like protein (ELP); injectable hydrogels; mesenchymal stem cells; secondary crosslinking

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [U19 AI116484-01, R21 EB018407-02, R01 DE024772]
  2. National Science Foundation [DMR 1508006, CBET-1351289]
  3. California Institute for Regenerative Medicine [RT3-07948, RT3-07804]
  4. Kodak Fellowship
  5. EU FP7 Marie Curie Innovative Training Network Grant [607842]
  6. VINNOVA VINNMER grant
  7. Stanford ChEM-H Institute
  8. Stanford Graduate Fellowship
  9. Stanford Interdisciplinary Graduate Fellowship

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Shear-thinning, self-healing hydrogels are promising vehicles for therapeutic cargo delivery due to their ability to be injected using minimally invasive surgical procedures. An injectable hydrogel using a novel combination of dynamic covalent crosslinking with thermoresponsive engineered proteins is presented. Ex situ at room temperature, rapid gelation occurs through dynamic covalent hydrazone bonds by simply mixing two components: hydrazine-modified elastin-like protein (ELP) and aldehyde-modified hyaluronic acid. This hydrogel provides significant mechanical protection to encapsulated human mesenchymal stem cells during syringe needle injection and rapidly recovers after injection to retain the cells homogeneously within a 3D environment. In situ, the ELP undergoes a thermal phase transition, as confirmed by coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering microscopy observation of dense ELP thermal aggregates. The formation of the secondary network reinforces the hydrogel and results in a tenfold slower erosion rate compared to a control hydrogel without secondary thermal crosslinking. This improved structural integrity enables cell culture for three weeks postinjection, and encapsulated cells maintain their ability to differentiate into multiple lineages, including chondrogenic, adipogenic, and osteogenic cell types. Together, these data demonstrate the promising potential of ELP-HA hydrogels for injectable stem cell transplantation and tissue regeneration.

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