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Porous Polylactide Microparticles as Effective Fillers for Hydrogels.

Yuriy D ZagoskinYana E SergeevaYuliya S FominaDaniil V SukhinovSergey N MalakhovEgor Olegovich OsidakElena A KhramtsovaPavel M GotovtsevSergey N ChvalunTimofei E Grigoriev
Published in: Biomimetics (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
High-strength composite hydrogels based on collagen or chitosan-genipin were obtained via mixing using highly porous polylactide (PLA) microparticles with diameters of 50-75 µm and porosity values of over 98%. The elastic modulus of hydrogels depended on the filler concentration. The modulus increased from 80 kPa to 400-600 kPa at a concentration of porous particles of 12-15 wt.% and up to 1.8 MPa at a filling of 20-25 wt.% for collagen hydrogels. The elastic modulus of the chitosan-genipin hydrogel increases from 75 kPa to 900 kPa at a fraction of particles of 20 wt.%. These elastic modulus values cover a range of strength properties from connective tissue to cartilage tissue. It is important to note that the increase in strength in this case is accompanied by a decrease in the density of the material, that is, an increase in porosity. PLA particles were loaded with C-phycocyanin and showed an advanced release profile up to 48 h. Thus, composite hydrogels mimic the structure, biomechanics and release of biomolecules in the tissues of a living organism.
Keyphrases
  • hyaluronic acid
  • tissue engineering
  • wound healing
  • drug delivery
  • drug release
  • extracellular matrix
  • gene expression
  • highly efficient