Morphing-to-Adhesion Polysaccharide Hydrogel for Adaptive Biointerfaces.
Shanshan WangQilong ZhaoJin-Hong LiXuemin DuPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2022)
Reliable functions of medical implants highly depend on biocompatible, conformal, and stable biointerfaces for seamless biointegration with biological tissues. Though flexible biointerfaces based on synthetic hydrogels have shown promise in optimizing implant biointegration via surgical suturing, physical attachment, or manual preshaping, they still suffer from poor adaptability, such as tissue damage by surgical suturing, low bioactivity, and difficulties in conformal contact and stable fixation, especially for specific tissues of large surface curvatures. Here, we report a bilayer hydrogel-based adaptive biointerface (HAB) made of two polysaccharide derivates, N -hydroxysuccinimide (NHS) ester-activated alginate and chitosan, harnessing dual advantages of their different swelling and active groups. Leveraging on the differential swelling between the two hydrogel layers and covalent linkages with active groups at hydrogel interfaces, HABs can be programmed into sealed tubes with tunable diameters via water-induced compliable shape morphing and instant interfacial adhesion. We further demonstrate that the polysaccharide-based morphing-to-adhesion HAB possesses outstanding bioactivity in directing cellular focal adhesion and intercellular junction, versatile geometrical adaptability to diverse tubular tissues with a wide range of surface curvatures (2.8 × 10 2 -1.3 × 10 3 m -1 ), and excellent mechanical stability in high load-/shear-bearing physiological environments (blood flow volume: 85 mm·s -1 ). HABs overcome the limitations of existing biointerfaces in terms of poor bioactivity and difficult biointegration with biological tissues of large surface curvatures, holding promise to open new avenues for adaptive biointerfaces and reliable medical implants.
Keyphrases
- drug delivery
- wound healing
- hyaluronic acid
- tissue engineering
- blood flow
- gene expression
- biofilm formation
- big data
- drug release
- healthcare
- minimally invasive
- cell adhesion
- high glucose
- soft tissue
- cell migration
- mental health
- ionic liquid
- oxidative stress
- machine learning
- physical activity
- molecular dynamics simulations
- stress induced