Hydrogels that are capable of wet adhesion and self-healing can enable major advances in a variety of biomedical applications such as tissue regeneration, wound dressings, wearable/implantable devices, and drug delivery. We hereby developed an innovative but simple strategy to achieve adhesive, self-healing, and highly stretchable double-network hydrogels, which were composed of a primary covalent polyethylene glycol diacrylate (PEGDA) network in combination with a noncovalent network of highly diffusive, giant PEG chains. The adhesion to substrates including tissue matrices was instant and repeatable due to the diffusive PEG chains that can spontaneously penetrate and entangle with the substrate network. Combining the intrinsic biocompatibility of PEG and rational design for tuning the hydrogel network properties, we exemplarily demonstrated that this hydrogel can be used as a three-dimensional matrix for cell culture or as a tissue adhesive for wound healing. The in vivo study showed that the hydrogel is capable of effectively triggering skin wound healing with a significantly lower immune response in comparison to commercial tissue adhesives currently used in clinics. Therefore, our study provides new and critical insights into the design strategy to achieve adhesion and rehealability by taking advantages of the entanglement effect from double-network hydrogels and opens up a new avenue for the application of entanglement-driven hydrogels in regenerative medicine.
Extrusible biomaterials have recently attracted increasing attention due to the desirable injectability and printability to allow minimally invasive administration and precise construction of tissue mimics. Specifically, self-healing colloidal gels are a novel class of candidate materials as injectables or printable inks considering their fascinating viscoelastic behavior and high degree of freedom on tailoring their compositional and mechanical properties. Herein, we developed a novel class of adaptable and osteogenic composite colloidal gels via electrostatic assembly of gelatin nanoparticles and nanoclay particles. These composite gels exhibited excellent injectability and printability, and remarkable mechanical properties reflected by the maximal elastic modulus reaching ~150 kPa combined with high self-healing efficiency, outperforming most previously reported self-healing hydrogels. Moreover, the cytocompatibility and the osteogenic capacity of the colloidal gels were demonstrated by inductive culture of MC3T3 cells seeded on the 3D-printed colloidal scaffolds. Besides, the biocompatibility and biodegradability of the colloidal gels was proved in vivo by subcutaneous implantation of the 3D-printed scaffolds. Furthermore, we investigated the therapeutic capacity of the colloidal gels, either in form of injectable gels or 3D-printed bone substitutes, using rat sinus bone augmentation model or critical-sized cranial defect model. The results confirmed that the composite gels were able to adapt to the local complexity including irregular or customized defect shapes and continuous on-site mechanical stimuli, but also to realize osteointegrity with the surrounding bone tissues and eventually be replaced by newly formed bones.
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