In pursuit of a wound-specific corneal adhesive, hydrogels formed by the reaction of propionaldehyde, butyraldehyde, or 2-oxoethyl succinate-functionalized poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) with a peptide-based dendritic cross-linker (Lys3Cys4) were characterized. These macromers react within minutes of mixing to form transparent and elastic hydrogels with in vitro degradation times that range from hours to months based on the type of bonds formed during the cross-linking reaction – either thiazolidine or pseudoproline. The mechanical properties of these materials, determined via parallel plate rheology, were dependent upon the polymer concentration, as was the hydrogel adhesive strength, which was determined by lap shear adhesive testing. In addition, these hydrogels were efficacious in closing ex vivo 4.1 mm central corneal lacerations: wounds closed with these hydrogel adhesives were able to withstand intraocular pressure values equivalent to, or in excess of, those obtained by closing the wounds with suturing.
As a platform for investigating the individual effects of substrate stiffness, permeability, and ligand density on cellular behavior, we developed a set of hydrogels with stiffness tuned by polymer backbone rigidity, independent of cross-link density and concentration. Previous studies report that poly(propargyl-L-glutamate) (PPLG), synthesized by ring-opening polymerization of the N-carboxy anhydride of γ-propargyl-L-glutamate (γpLglu), adopts a rigid a-helix conformation: we hypothesized that a random copolymer (PPDLG) with equal amounts of γpLglu and γ-propargyl-D-glutamate (γpDglu) monomers would exhibit a more flexible random coil conformation. The resulting macromers exhibited narrow molecular weight distributions (PDI = 1.15) and were grafted with ethylene glycol groups using a highly efficient “click” azide/alkyne cycloaddition reaction with average grafting efficiency of 97% for PPLG and 85% for PPDLG. The polypeptide secondary structure, characterized via circular dichroism spectroscopy, FTIR spectroscopy, and dynamic light scattering, is indeed dependent upon monomer chirality: PPLG exhibits an α-helix conformation while PPDLG adopts a random coil conformation. Hydrogel networks produced by cross-linking either helical or random coil polypeptides with poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) were analyzed for amount of swelling, gelation efficiency, and permeability to a model protein. In addition, the elastic modulus of helical and coil polypeptide gels was determined by AFM indentation in fluid. Importantly, we found that helical and coil polypeptide gels exhibited similar swelling and permeability but different stiffnesses, which correspond to predictions from the theory of semi-flexible chains.
Blindness due to opacity of the cornea is treated by corneal transplantation with donor tissue. Due to the limited supply of suitable donor corneas, the need for synthetic corneal equivalents is clear. Herein we report the design and in vitro characterization of a hydrogel-based implant; this implant will serve as a permanent, transparent, space-filling onlay with a two-layer design that mimics the native corneal stratification to support surface epithelialization and foster integration with the surrounding tissue. The top layer of the implant was composed of a 2-hydroxyethylmethacrylate hydrogel containing methacrylic acid as the co-monomer (HEMA-co-MAA) with tunable dimensions and compressive modulus ranging from 700-1000 kPa. The bottom layer, which constitutes the bulk of the implant and is designed to provide integration with the corneal stroma, is a dendrimer hydrogel with high water content and compressive modulus ranging from 500-1200 kPa. Both hydrogels were found to possess optical and diffusion properties similar to those of the human cornea. In addition, composite implants with uniform and structurally sound interfaces were formed when the gels were sequentially injected and cross-linked in the same mold. HEMA-co-MAA hydrogels were covalently modified with type I collagen to enable corneal epithelial cell adhesion and spreading that was dependent upon the collagen coating density but independent of hydrogel stiffness. Similarly, dendrimer hydrogels supported the adhesion and spreading of corneal fibroblasts upon modification with the adhesion ligand arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (RGD). Fibroblast adhesion was not dependent upon dendrimer hydrogel stiffness for the formulations studied and, after in vitro culture for 4 weeks, fibroblasts remained able to adhere to and conformally coat the hydrogel surface. In conclusion, the tunable physical properties and structural integrity of the laminated interface suggests that this design is suitable for further study. The judicious tuning of material properties and inclusion of bioactive moieties is a promising strategy for promotion of implant epithelialization and tissue integration.
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