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Macroporous PEG-Alginate Hybrid Double-Network Cryogels with Tunable Degradation Rates Prepared via Radical-Free Cross-Linking for Cartilage Tissue Engineering.

Kaixiang ZhangZining YangMichael Patrick SeitzEra Jain
Published in: ACS applied bio materials (2024)
Trauma or repeated damage to joints can result in focal cartilage defects, significantly elevating the risk of osteoarthritis. Damaged cartilage has an inherently limited self-healing capacity and remains an urgent unmet clinical need. Consequently, there is growing interest in biodegradable hydrogels as potential scaffolds for the repair or reconstruction of cartilage defects. Here, we developed a biodegradable and macroporous hybrid double-network (DN) cryogel by combining two independently cross-linked networks of multiarm polyethylene glycol (PEG) acrylate and alginate.Hybrid DN cryogels are formed using highly biocompatible click reactions for the PEG network and ionic bonding for the alginate network. By judicious selection of various structurally similar cross-linkers to form the PEG network, we can generate hybrid DN cryogels with customizable degradation kinetics. The resulting PEG-alginate hybrid DN cryogels have an interconnected macroporous structure, high mechanical strength, and rapid swelling kinetics. The interconnected macropores in the cryogels support efficient mesenchymal stem cell infiltration at a high density. Finally, we demonstrate that PEG-alginate hybrid DN cryogels allow sustained release of chondrogenic growth factors and support chondrogenic differentiation of mouse mesenchymal stem cells. This study provides a novel method to generate macroporous hybrid DN cryogels with customizable degradation rates and a potential scaffold for cartilage tissue engineering.
Keyphrases
  • tissue engineering
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • drug delivery
  • extracellular matrix
  • high density
  • rheumatoid arthritis
  • drug release
  • oxidative stress
  • network analysis
  • risk assessment