Published May 23, 2022 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Effect of crosslinking strategy on the biological, antibacterial and physicochemical performance of hyaluronic acid and ɛ-polylysine based hydrogels

  • 1. Rudolfs Cimdins Riga Biomaterials Innovations and Development Centre of RTU, Institute of General Chemical Engineering, Faculty of Materials Science and Applied Chemistry, Riga Technical University, Pulka St. 3/3, Riga LV-1007, Latvia
  • 2. AO Research Institute Davos, Clavadelerstrasse 8, 7270 Davos, Switzerland
  • 3. Department of Microbiology and Biotechnology, Faculty of Biology, University of Latvia, Riga, Latvia

Description

The design of multifunctional hydrogels based on bioactive hyaluronic acid (HA) and antibacterial cationic polymer ε-poly-L-lysine (ε-PL) is a promising tool in tissue engineering applications. In the current study, we have designed hyaluronic acid and ε-polylysine composite hydrogel systems with antibacterial and cell attractive properties. Two distinct crosslinking approaches were used: the physical crosslinking based on electrostatic at- tractions and the chemical crosslinking of charged functional groups (-NH2 and -COOH). The impact of the crosslinking strategy on fabricated hydrogel molecular structure, swelling behavior, gel fraction, morphology, porosity, viscoelastic properties, antibacterial activity, and in vitro biocompatibility was evaluated. Both chemically and physically crosslinked HA/ԑ-PL hydrogels demonstrated fast swelling behavior and long-term stability for at least 28 days, as well as similar order of stiffness (10–30 kPa). We demonstrated that physi- cally crosslinked hydrogels inhibited over 99.999% of Gram-negative E. coli, while chemically crosslinking strategy led to the antibacterial efficiency decrease. However, cell viability was significantly improved, con- firming the importance of the applied crosslinking approach to the antibacterial activity and in vitro biocom- patibility. The distinct differences in the physicochemical and biological properties of the developed materials provide new opportunities to design next-generation functional composite hydrogel systems.

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Additional details

Funding

European Commission
ImmunoBioInks - Instructing Immune System to Regenerate Musculoskeletal Tissues via Structurally Programmable Bio-Inks 893099
European Commission
RISEus2 - Rising competitiveness of early stage researchers and research management in Latvia 952347