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Growth Factor Immobilization to Synthetic Hydrogels: Bioactive bfgf-functionalized Polyisocyanide Hydrogels.

Melissa J J van VelthovenAksel N GuddeEvert ArendsenJan-Paul W R RooversZeliha GulerEgbert OosterwijkPaul H J Kouwer
Published in: Advanced healthcare materials (2023)
With its involvement in cell proliferation, migration and differentiation basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) has great potential for tissue engineering purposes. So far, however, clinical translation of soluble bFGF-based therapies is unsuccessful, because the required effective doses are often supraphysiological, which may cause adverse effects. An effective solution is growth factor immobilization, whereby bFGF retains its bioactivity at increased efficacy. Studied carriers include films, solid scaffolds and particles, as well as natural and synthetic hydrogels. However, these synthetic hydrogels poorly resemble characteristics of the native extracellular matrix (ECM). In this work, bFGF is covalently conjugated to the synthetic, but highly biocompatible, polyisocyanide-based hydrogel (PIC-bFGF), which closely mimics the architecture and mechanical properties of the ECM. The growth factor conjugation protocol is straightforward and readily extrapolated to other growth factors or proteins. The PIC-bFGF hydrogel shows a prolonged bioactivity up to four weeks although no clear effects on the ECM metabolism were observed. Beyond the future potential of the PIC-bFGF hydrogel towards various tissue engineering applications, this work underlines that simple biological conjugation procedures are a powerful strategy to induce additional bioactivity in 3D synthetic cell culture matrices. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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