Molecularly Engineered Supramolecular Thermoresponsive Hydrogels with Tunable Mechanical and Dynamic Properties.
Laura RijnsHeleen DuijsRené P M LafleurRuth CardinaelsAnja R A PalmansPatricia Y W DankersLu SuPublished in: Biomacromolecules (2024)
Synthetic supramolecular polymers and hydrogels in water are emerging as promising biomaterials due to their modularity and intrinsic dynamics. Here, we introduce temperature sensitivity into the nonfunctionalized benzene-1,3,5-tricarboxamide ( BTA-EG 4 ) supramolecular system by incorporating a poly( N -isopropylacrylamide)-functionalized ( BTA-PNIPAM) moiety, enabling 3D cell encapsulation applications. The viscous and structural properties in the solution state as well as the mechanical and dynamic features in the gel state of BTA-PNIPAM/BTA-EG 4 mixtures were investigated and modulated. In the dilute state ( c ∼μM), BTA-PNIPAM acted as a chain capper below the cloud point temperature ( T cp = 24 °C) but served as a cross-linker above T cp . At higher concentrations ( c ∼mM), weak or stiff hydrogels were obtained, depending on the BTA-PNIPAM/BTA-EG 4 ratio. The mixture with the highest BTA-PNIPAM ratio was ∼100 times stiffer and ∼10 times less dynamic than BTA-EG 4 hydrogel. Facile cell encapsulation in 3D was realized by leveraging the temperature-sensitive sol-gel transition, opening opportunities for utilizing this hydrogel as an extracellular matrix mimic.