Correlation of Bulk Degradation and Molecular Release from Enzymatically Degradable Polymeric Hydrogels.
2021
In this work, we establish a quantitative correlation between molecular release and material degradation. We characterize a radical-initiated photopolymerized hydrogel and base-initiated Michael addition-polymerized hydrogel, which form gels through distinct crosslinking reactions. Both scaffolds use the same degradable peptide crosslinker, which enables them to be degraded through the same enzymatic degradation reaction. A fluorescently labeled poly(ethylene glycol) molecule is chemically conjugated into the scaffold and is released during enzymatic degradation. Real-time changes in scaffold rheological properties during degradation are measured using bulk rheology. Molecular release is measured by quantifying the change in fluorescence in the incubation liquid and the hydrogel scaffold. A complicating factor, previously described in the literature, is that shear may cause increased crosslinking, resulting in an increase in the storage modulus after initiation of degradation, which changes release profiles by limiting the initial release of molecules. Therefore, we also test the hypothesis that shear induces additional crosslinking in degrading hydrogel scaffolds. To determine whether shear changes rheological properties during scaffold degradation, enzymatic degradation is characterized using bulk rheology as materials undergo continuous or minimal shear. To determine the effect of shear on molecular release, shear is induced by shaking the material during incubation. Release is characterized from scaffolds that are incubated with continuous or without shaking. We determine that shear does not make a difference in scaffold degradation or release regardless of the gelation reaction. Instead, we determine that the type of hydrogel crosslinking reaction greatly affects both material degradation and molecular release. A hydrogel crosslinking by base-initiated Michael addition does undergo further crosslinking at the start of degradation. We correlate release with enzymatic degradation for both scaffolds. We determine that the material storage modulus is indirectly correlated with release during degradation. These results indicate that rheological characterization is a useful tool to characterize and predict the release of molecules from degrading hydrogels.
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