Peptide-/Drug-Directed Self-Assembly of Hybrid Polyurethane Hydrogels for Wound Healing.
Fanjun ZhangCheng HuQunshou KongRifang LuoYun-Bing WangPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2019)
Drug-loading hydrogels are promising candidates in the bioengineering research field; nevertheless, hydrophobic drug loading into a hydrophilic carrier system remains unsolved and is full of challenges. In this work, following the potential dual interactions between peptides and aromatic drugs, we developed a potent hybrid hydrogel formation method, namely, "peptide-/drug-directed self-assembly". The hybrid hydrogels were synthesized using polyethylene glycol (PEG)-based Fmoc-FF peptide hybrid polyurethane, in which curcumin could be encapsulated through self-assembly with Fmoc-FF peptide via π-π stacking. On the basis of this, curcumin loading capacity could be improved to as high as 3.3 wt % with sustained release. In addition, the curcumin loading enhanced the hydrogel mechanical properties from 4 kPa to over 10 kPa, similar to that of natural soft tissues. Furthermore, the hydrogels were injectable with self-healing properties since the Fmoc-FF peptide/curcumin coassembly was noncovalent and reversible. Spectroscopy results confirmed the existence of the coassembly of Fmoc-FF peptide/curcumin. Further in vivo experiments effectively demonstrated that the hydrogels could improve the cutaneous wound healing in a full-thickness skin defected model. This peptide-/drug-directed self-assembly of hybrid polyurethane hydrogel could be used as a promising platform for tissue-engineering scaffold and biomedical application.