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Nitric Oxide-Releasing Supramolecular Cellulose Nanocrystal/Silsesquioxane Foams.

Laura C E da SilvaMaria do Carmo GonçalvesMarcelo Ganzarolli de Oliveira
Published in: Macromolecular rapid communications (2022)
Cellulose nanocrystals (CNC)-based foams are promising tissue engineering materials that may facilitate implant-tissue integration and allow localized and controlled drug delivery. Herein, hybrid CNC-based foams, which are ultralightweight (30-100 mg cm -3 ), highly porous (>95%), ominiphilic and superabsorbent (1500-3000 wt% of water and/or toluene uptake) are obtained by the in situ condensation of poly(ethylene glycol) ditriethoxysilyl (TES-PEG-TES) into a 3D network, where silsesquioxane nanoparticles (SS-NP) are the crosslinking nodes, and CNC are entrapped forming ionic interactions, in a supramolecular structure. In a new approach, using 3-mercaptopropyltrimethoxysilane, sulfhydryl groups are inserted on the SS-NP periphery and S-nitrosated to enable the functionalization of SS-NP with S-nitrosothiol groups, which can nitric oxide (NO), in a process triggered by the hydration of the foams and modulated by their supramolecular structure. CNC-SS-PEG foams exhibit elevated thermal and structural stability, compressive strength compatible with various soft human tissues, and NO release rates (1-18 pmol mg -1 min -1 ) within the range of the beneficial NO actions. Thus, the CNC-SS-PEG foams herein described represent a new platform of supramolecular hybrid materials for localized delivery of NO, with potential uses in tissue engineering and other biomedical applications.
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