Proangiogenic alginate-g-pyrrole hydrogel with decoupled control of mechanical rigidity and electrically conductivity

Abstract Background An electrically conductive hydrogel has emerged to regulate cellular secretion activities with electrical stimulation. However, the electrical conductivity of typical hydrogel systems decreases with increasing elastic modulus of the hydrogels because of decreased transport of ion...

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Main Authors: Ross J. DeVolder, Yongbeom Seo, Hyunjoon Kong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-11-01
Series:Biomaterials Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40824-017-0110-x
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spelling doaj-a632e9f3c5324b0fb73177008b1ad9742020-11-25T01:07:28ZengBMCBiomaterials Research2055-71242017-11-012111810.1186/s40824-017-0110-xProangiogenic alginate-g-pyrrole hydrogel with decoupled control of mechanical rigidity and electrically conductivityRoss J. DeVolder0Yongbeom Seo1Hyunjoon Kong2Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignDepartment of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignDepartment of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignAbstract Background An electrically conductive hydrogel has emerged to regulate cellular secretion activities with electrical stimulation. However, the electrical conductivity of typical hydrogel systems decreases with increasing elastic modulus of the hydrogels because of decreased transport of ions through a polymeric cross-linked mesh. Method This study hypothesized that the inverse dependency between electrical conductivity and elastic modulus would be made through the cross-linking of conductive monomer-units conjugated to a hydrophilic polymeric backbone. This hypothesis was examined through the cross-linking of pyrrole groups that were conjugated to an alginate backbone, termed alginate-g-pyrrole. Results Hydrogels with increased degrees of pyrrole substitution exhibited a simultaneous increase in the gels mechanical rigidity and electrical conductivity. The resulting hydrogel could control the adhesion and vascular endothelial growth factor secretion of cells via applied electrical stimulation. Conclusions This material design principle will be broadly useful to fabricating materials used for various actuation, cell culture, and biomedical applications.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40824-017-0110-xAlginate hydrogelPyrroleElectrical stimulationVascular endothelial growth factorElastic modulus
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ross J. DeVolder
Yongbeom Seo
Hyunjoon Kong
spellingShingle Ross J. DeVolder
Yongbeom Seo
Hyunjoon Kong
Proangiogenic alginate-g-pyrrole hydrogel with decoupled control of mechanical rigidity and electrically conductivity
Biomaterials Research
Alginate hydrogel
Pyrrole
Electrical stimulation
Vascular endothelial growth factor
Elastic modulus
author_facet Ross J. DeVolder
Yongbeom Seo
Hyunjoon Kong
author_sort Ross J. DeVolder
title Proangiogenic alginate-g-pyrrole hydrogel with decoupled control of mechanical rigidity and electrically conductivity
title_short Proangiogenic alginate-g-pyrrole hydrogel with decoupled control of mechanical rigidity and electrically conductivity
title_full Proangiogenic alginate-g-pyrrole hydrogel with decoupled control of mechanical rigidity and electrically conductivity
title_fullStr Proangiogenic alginate-g-pyrrole hydrogel with decoupled control of mechanical rigidity and electrically conductivity
title_full_unstemmed Proangiogenic alginate-g-pyrrole hydrogel with decoupled control of mechanical rigidity and electrically conductivity
title_sort proangiogenic alginate-g-pyrrole hydrogel with decoupled control of mechanical rigidity and electrically conductivity
publisher BMC
series Biomaterials Research
issn 2055-7124
publishDate 2017-11-01
description Abstract Background An electrically conductive hydrogel has emerged to regulate cellular secretion activities with electrical stimulation. However, the electrical conductivity of typical hydrogel systems decreases with increasing elastic modulus of the hydrogels because of decreased transport of ions through a polymeric cross-linked mesh. Method This study hypothesized that the inverse dependency between electrical conductivity and elastic modulus would be made through the cross-linking of conductive monomer-units conjugated to a hydrophilic polymeric backbone. This hypothesis was examined through the cross-linking of pyrrole groups that were conjugated to an alginate backbone, termed alginate-g-pyrrole. Results Hydrogels with increased degrees of pyrrole substitution exhibited a simultaneous increase in the gels mechanical rigidity and electrical conductivity. The resulting hydrogel could control the adhesion and vascular endothelial growth factor secretion of cells via applied electrical stimulation. Conclusions This material design principle will be broadly useful to fabricating materials used for various actuation, cell culture, and biomedical applications.
topic Alginate hydrogel
Pyrrole
Electrical stimulation
Vascular endothelial growth factor
Elastic modulus
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40824-017-0110-x
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AT yongbeomseo proangiogenicalginategpyrrolehydrogelwithdecoupledcontrolofmechanicalrigidityandelectricallyconductivity
AT hyunjoonkong proangiogenicalginategpyrrolehydrogelwithdecoupledcontrolofmechanicalrigidityandelectricallyconductivity
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