Effect of Carboxymethylation on the Rheological Properties of Hyaluronan.

Chemical modifications made to hyaluronan to enable covalent crosslinking to form a hydrogel or to attach other molecules may alter the physical properties as well, which have physiological importance. Here we created carboxymethyl hyaluronan (CMHA) with varied degree of modification and investigate...

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Main Authors: Rian J Wendling, Amanda M Christensen, Arthur D Quast, Sarah K Atzet, Brenda K Mann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5017724?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-22ea104cbebd463f8132848822fd028a2020-11-25T01:26:49ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01119e016284910.1371/journal.pone.0162849Effect of Carboxymethylation on the Rheological Properties of Hyaluronan.Rian J WendlingAmanda M ChristensenArthur D QuastSarah K AtzetBrenda K MannChemical modifications made to hyaluronan to enable covalent crosslinking to form a hydrogel or to attach other molecules may alter the physical properties as well, which have physiological importance. Here we created carboxymethyl hyaluronan (CMHA) with varied degree of modification and investigated the effect on the viscosity of CMHA solutions. Viscosity decreased initially as modification increased, with a minimum viscosity for about 30-40% modification. This was followed by an increase in viscosity around 45-50% modification. The pH of the solution had a variable effect on viscosity, depending on the degree of carboxymethyl modification and buffer. The presence of phosphates in the buffer led to decreased viscosity. We also compared large-scale production lots of CMHA to lab-scale and found that large-scale required extended reaction times to achieve the same degree of modification. Finally, thiolated CMHA was disulfide crosslinked to create hydrogels with increased viscosity and shear-thinning aspects compared to CMHA solutions.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5017724?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rian J Wendling
Amanda M Christensen
Arthur D Quast
Sarah K Atzet
Brenda K Mann
spellingShingle Rian J Wendling
Amanda M Christensen
Arthur D Quast
Sarah K Atzet
Brenda K Mann
Effect of Carboxymethylation on the Rheological Properties of Hyaluronan.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Rian J Wendling
Amanda M Christensen
Arthur D Quast
Sarah K Atzet
Brenda K Mann
author_sort Rian J Wendling
title Effect of Carboxymethylation on the Rheological Properties of Hyaluronan.
title_short Effect of Carboxymethylation on the Rheological Properties of Hyaluronan.
title_full Effect of Carboxymethylation on the Rheological Properties of Hyaluronan.
title_fullStr Effect of Carboxymethylation on the Rheological Properties of Hyaluronan.
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Carboxymethylation on the Rheological Properties of Hyaluronan.
title_sort effect of carboxymethylation on the rheological properties of hyaluronan.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Chemical modifications made to hyaluronan to enable covalent crosslinking to form a hydrogel or to attach other molecules may alter the physical properties as well, which have physiological importance. Here we created carboxymethyl hyaluronan (CMHA) with varied degree of modification and investigated the effect on the viscosity of CMHA solutions. Viscosity decreased initially as modification increased, with a minimum viscosity for about 30-40% modification. This was followed by an increase in viscosity around 45-50% modification. The pH of the solution had a variable effect on viscosity, depending on the degree of carboxymethyl modification and buffer. The presence of phosphates in the buffer led to decreased viscosity. We also compared large-scale production lots of CMHA to lab-scale and found that large-scale required extended reaction times to achieve the same degree of modification. Finally, thiolated CMHA was disulfide crosslinked to create hydrogels with increased viscosity and shear-thinning aspects compared to CMHA solutions.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5017724?pdf=render
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