4.8 Article

Engineering PEG-based hydrogels to foster efficient endothelial network formation in free-swelling and confined microenvironments

期刊

BIOMATERIALS
卷 243, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2020.119921

关键词

Microvascular network; Endothelial cells; poly(ethylene glycol); poly(propargyl-L-glutamate); Synthetic hydrogel; Swelling

资金

  1. National Science Foundation Science and Technology Center for Emergent Behaviors of Integrated Cellular Systems [CBET-0939511]
  2. National Institutes of Health Biotechnology Training program [NIH T32GM008334]
  3. Koch Institute Bridge Grant for Pediatric Brain Tumors

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In vitro tissue engineered models are poised to have significant impact on disease modeling and preclinical drug development. Reliable methods to induce microvascular networks in such microphysiological systems are needed to improve the size and physiological function of these models. By systematically engineering several physical and biomolecular properties of the cellular microenvironment (including crosslinking density, polymer density, adhesion ligand concentration, and degradability), we establish design principles that describe how synthetic matrix properties influence vascular morphogenesis in modular and tunable hydrogels based on commercial 8-arm poly (ethylene glycol) (PEG8a) macromers. We apply these design principles to generate endothelial networks that exhibit consistent morphology throughout depths of hydrogel greater than 1 mm. These PEG8a-based hydrogels have relatively high volumetric swelling ratios (> 1.5), which limits their utility in confined environments such as microfluidic devices. To overcome this limitation, we mitigate swelling by incorporating a highly functional PEG-grafted alpha-helical poly (propargyl-L-glutamate) (PPLGgPEG) macromer along with the canonical 8-arm PEG8a macromer in gel formation. This hydrogel platform supports enhanced endothelial morphogenesis in neutral-swelling environments. Finally, we incorporate PEG8a-PPLGgPEG gels into microfluidic devices and demonstrate improved diffusion kinetics and microvascular network formation in situ compared to PEG8a-based gels.

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