Poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) hydrogels are one of the most extensively utilized biomaterials systems due to their established biocompatibility and highly tunable properties. It is widely acknowledged that traditional acrylate-derivatized PEG (PEGDA) hydrogels are susceptible to slow degradation in vivo and are therefore unsuitable for long-term implantable applications. However, there is speculation whether the observed degradation is due to hydrolysis of endgroup acrylate esters or oxidation of the ether backbone both of which are possible in the foreign body response to implanted devices. PEG diacrylamide (PEGDAA) is a polyether-based hydrogel system with similar properties to PEGDA but with amide linkages in place of the acrylate esters. This provides a hydrolytically-stable control that can be used to isolate the relative contributions of hydrolysis and oxidation to the in vivo degradation of PEGDA. Here we show that PEGDAA hydrogels remained stable over 12 weeks of subcutaneous implantation in a rat model while PEGDA hydrogels underwent significant degradation as indicated by both increased swelling ratio and decreased modulus. As PEGDA and PEGDAA have similar susceptibility to oxidation, these results demonstrate for the first time that the primary in vivo degradation mechanism of PEGDA is hydrolysis of the endgroup acrylate ester. Additionally, the maintenance of PEGDAA hydrogel properties in vivo indicates their suitability for long-term implants. These studies serve to elucidate key information about a widely used biomaterial system to allow for better implantable device design and to provide a biostable replacement option for PEGDA in applications that require long-term stability.
The exceptional tunability of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) hydrogel chemical, mechanical, and biological properties enables their successful use in a wide range of biomedical applications. Although PEG diacrylate (PEGDA) hydrogels are often used as nondegradable controls in short-term in vitro studies, it is widely acknowledged that the hydrolytically labile esters formed upon acrylation of the PEG diol make them susceptible to slow degradation in vivo. A PEG hydrogel system that maintains the desirable properties of PEGDA while improving biostability would be valuable in preventing degradation-related failure of gel-based devices in long-term in vivo applications. To this end, PEG diacrylamide (PEGDAA) hydrogels were synthesized and characterized in quantitative comparison to traditional PEGDA hydrogels. It was found that PEGDAA hydrogel modulus and swelling can be tuned over a similar range and to comparable degrees as PEGDA hydrogels with changes in macromer molecular weight and concentration. Additionally, PEGDAA cytocompatibility, low cell adhesion, and capacity for incorporation of bioactivity were analogous to that of PEGDA. In vitro hydrolytic degradation studies showed that the amide-based PEGDAA had significantly increased biostability relative to PEGDA. Overall, these findings indicate that PEGDAA hydrogels are a suitable replacement for PEGDA hydrogels with enhanced hydrolytic resistance. In addition, these studies provide a quantitative measure of the hydrolytic degradation rate of PEGDA hydrogels which was previously lacking in the literature.
Poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) hydrogels are of great interest in tissue engineering because of their established biocompatibility, high permeability, and tunable material properties. However, rational design of PEG hydrogel scaffold properties has been inhibited by the interdependence of key material properties such as modulus and mesh size. This study examined the effect of an acrylated 4-arm PEG cross-linker on gel modulus and mesh size as a means of inducing local increases in cross-link density to decouple these two parameters. It was determined that adding the 4-arm PEG cross-linker to PEG hydrogels resulted in statistically significant increases in both tensile and compressive modulus while having minimal effects on overall gel mesh size. The incorporation of the 4-arm PEG cross-linker also broadened the range of achievable mechanical properties. This study provides the methodology to independently tune PEG hydrogel modulus and mesh size, which may be utilized in future investigations of the individual and combined effects of PEG hydrogel modulus and mesh size on cell behavior and viability. It also presents a more finely tunable hydrogel scaffold with utility in a broad range of tissue engineering applications.
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