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Mechano-Responsive Hydrogels Driven by the Dissociation of a Host-Guest Complex.

Akihide SugawaraTaka-Aki AsohYoshinori TakashimaAkira HaradaHiroshi Uyama
Published in: ACS macro letters (2021)
We developed a mechano-responsive hydrogel that is driven by the dissociation of a host-guest complex. The hydrogel comprised a thermoresponsive linear polymer with adamantane as a guest molecule in its side chain and a nonthermoresponsive network structure with β-cyclodextrin as a host molecule. Immobilization of the thermoresponsive polymer in the hydrogel via host-guest interaction resulted in a partial restriction of its phase transition, even above its lower critical solution temperature (LCST). The hydrogel demonstrated a decrease in transmittance when mechanical stress was applied at a temperature above its LCST, indicating that the phase transition of the thermoresponsive polymer was induced by the dissociation of the host-guest complex under mechanical stress. Moreover, this mechano-responsive behavior was repeatable by cooling the hydrogel to redissolve the thermoresponsive polymer. The strategy of the mechano-responsive phase transition will be useful for various applications that demand the control of desired functions by applied stress.
Keyphrases
  • drug delivery
  • cancer therapy
  • hyaluronic acid
  • tissue engineering
  • wound healing
  • water soluble
  • stress induced
  • electron transfer
  • extracellular matrix