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Get Free AccessProtein hydrogels are an important class of materials for applications in biotechnology and medicine. The fine-tuning of their sequence, molecular weight, and stereochemistry offers unique opportunities to engineer biofunctionality, biocompatibility, and biodegradability into these materials. Here we report a new family of redox-sensitive protein hydrogels with controllable mechanical properties composed of recombinant silk-elastin-like protein polymers (SELPs). The SELPs were designed and synthesized with different ratios of silk-to-elastin blocks that incorporated periodic cysteine residues. The cysteine-containing SELPs were thermally responsive in solution and rapidly formed hydrogels at body temperature under physiologically relevant, mild oxidative conditions. Upon addition of a low concentration of hydrogen peroxide at 0.05% (w/v), gelation occurred within minutes for the SELPs with a protein concentration of approximately 4% (w/v). The gelation time and mechanical properties of the hydrogels were dependent on the ratio of silk to elastin. These polymer designs also significantly affected redox-sensitive release of a highly polar model drug from the hydrogels in vitro. Furthermore, oxidative gelation was performed at other physiologically relevant temperatures, and this resulted in hydrogels with tunable mechanical properties, thus, providing a secondary level of control over hydrogel stiffness. These newly developed injectable SELP hydrogels with redox-sensitive features and tunable mechanical properties may be potentially useful as biomaterials with broad applications in controlled drug delivery and tissue engineering.
Mingliang Zhou, Zhi‐Gang Qian, Liang Chen, David Kaplan, Xiao‐Xia Xia (2016). Rationally Designed Redox-Sensitive Protein Hydrogels with Tunable Mechanical Properties. , 17(11), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biomac.6b00973.
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Type
Article
Year
2016
Authors
5
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
en
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biomac.6b00973
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