Novel polyurethane-based thermosensitive hydrogels as drug release and tissue engineering platforms: Design and in vitro characterization

Monica Boffito, Emilia Gioffredi, Valeria Chiono, Stefano Calzone, Elia Ranzato, Simona Martinotti, Gianluca Ciardelli

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Poloxamer P407 (P407) is a Food and Drug Administration approved triblock copolymer; its hydrogels show fast dissolution in aqueous environment and weak mechanical strength, limiting their in vivo application. In this work, an amphiphilic poly(ether urethane) (NHP407) was synthesized from P407, an aliphatic diisocyanate (1,6-hexanediisocyanate) and an amino acid derived diol (N-Boc serinol). NHP407 solutions in water-based media were able to form biocompatible injectable thermosensitive hydrogels with a lower critical gelation temperature behavior, having lower critical gelation concentration (6% w/v versus 18% w/v), superior gel strength (G′ at 37°C about 40000Pa versus 10000Pa), faster gelation kinetics (<5min versus 15-30min) and higher stability in physiological conditions (28days versus 5 days) compared to P407 hydrogels. Gel strength and PBS absorption at 37°C increased whereas dissolution rate (in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) at 37°C) and permeability to nutrients (studied using fluorescein isothiocyanate-dextran model molecule) decreased as a function of NHP407 hydrogel concentration from 10% to 20% w/v. By varying the concentration, NHP407 hydrogels were thus prepared with different properties which could suit specific applications, such as in situ drug/cell delivery or bioprinting of scaffolds. Moreover, deprotected amino groups in NHP407 could be exploited for the grafting of bioactive molecules obtaining biomimetic hydrogels.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)756-769
Number of pages14
JournalPolymer International
Volume65
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jul 2016

Keywords

  • Bioprinting
  • Drug release
  • Poloxamer
  • Polyurethane hydrogels
  • Thermosensitive hydrogels
  • Tissue engineering

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