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Biomimetic strain-stiffening in fully synthetic dynamic-covalent hydrogel networks

Mechanoresponsiveness is a ubiquitous feature of soft materials in nature; biological tissues exhibit both strain-stiffening and self-healing in order to prevent and repair deformation-induced damage. These features remain challenging to replicate in synthetic and flexible polymeric materials. In re...

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Autores principales: Ollier, Rachel C., Xiang, Yuanhui, Yacovelli, Adriana M., Webber, Matthew J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10171040/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37181784
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3sc00011g
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author Ollier, Rachel C.
Xiang, Yuanhui
Yacovelli, Adriana M.
Webber, Matthew J.
author_facet Ollier, Rachel C.
Xiang, Yuanhui
Yacovelli, Adriana M.
Webber, Matthew J.
author_sort Ollier, Rachel C.
collection PubMed
description Mechanoresponsiveness is a ubiquitous feature of soft materials in nature; biological tissues exhibit both strain-stiffening and self-healing in order to prevent and repair deformation-induced damage. These features remain challenging to replicate in synthetic and flexible polymeric materials. In recreating both the mechanical and structural features of soft biological tissues, hydrogels have been often explored for a number of biological and biomedical applications. However, synthetic polymeric hydrogels rarely replicate the mechanoresponsive character of natural biological materials, failing to match both strain-stiffening and self-healing functionality. Here, strain-stiffening behavior is realized in fully synthetic ideal network hydrogels prepared from flexible 4-arm polyethylene glycol macromers via dynamic-covalent boronate ester crosslinks. Shear rheology reveals the strain-stiffening response in these networks as a function of polymer concentration, pH, and temperature. Across all three of these variables, hydrogels of lower stiffness exhibit higher degrees of stiffening, as quantified by the stiffening index. The reversibility and self-healing nature of this strain-stiffening response is also evident upon strain-cycling. The mechanism underlying this unusual stiffening response is attributed to a combination of entropic and enthalpic elasticity in these crosslink-dominant networks, contrasting with natural biopolymers that primarily strain-stiffen due to a strain-induced reduction in conformational entropy of entangled fibrillar structures. This work thus offers key insights into crosslink-driven strain-stiffening in dynamic-covalent phenylboronic acid–diol hydrogels as a function of experimental and environmental parameters. Moreover, the biomimetic mechano- and chemoresponsive nature of this simple ideal-network hydrogel offers a promising platform for future applications.
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spelling pubmed-101710402023-05-11 Biomimetic strain-stiffening in fully synthetic dynamic-covalent hydrogel networks Ollier, Rachel C. Xiang, Yuanhui Yacovelli, Adriana M. Webber, Matthew J. Chem Sci Chemistry Mechanoresponsiveness is a ubiquitous feature of soft materials in nature; biological tissues exhibit both strain-stiffening and self-healing in order to prevent and repair deformation-induced damage. These features remain challenging to replicate in synthetic and flexible polymeric materials. In recreating both the mechanical and structural features of soft biological tissues, hydrogels have been often explored for a number of biological and biomedical applications. However, synthetic polymeric hydrogels rarely replicate the mechanoresponsive character of natural biological materials, failing to match both strain-stiffening and self-healing functionality. Here, strain-stiffening behavior is realized in fully synthetic ideal network hydrogels prepared from flexible 4-arm polyethylene glycol macromers via dynamic-covalent boronate ester crosslinks. Shear rheology reveals the strain-stiffening response in these networks as a function of polymer concentration, pH, and temperature. Across all three of these variables, hydrogels of lower stiffness exhibit higher degrees of stiffening, as quantified by the stiffening index. The reversibility and self-healing nature of this strain-stiffening response is also evident upon strain-cycling. The mechanism underlying this unusual stiffening response is attributed to a combination of entropic and enthalpic elasticity in these crosslink-dominant networks, contrasting with natural biopolymers that primarily strain-stiffen due to a strain-induced reduction in conformational entropy of entangled fibrillar structures. This work thus offers key insights into crosslink-driven strain-stiffening in dynamic-covalent phenylboronic acid–diol hydrogels as a function of experimental and environmental parameters. Moreover, the biomimetic mechano- and chemoresponsive nature of this simple ideal-network hydrogel offers a promising platform for future applications. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023-04-13 /pmc/articles/PMC10171040/ /pubmed/37181784 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3sc00011g Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Ollier, Rachel C.
Xiang, Yuanhui
Yacovelli, Adriana M.
Webber, Matthew J.
Biomimetic strain-stiffening in fully synthetic dynamic-covalent hydrogel networks
title Biomimetic strain-stiffening in fully synthetic dynamic-covalent hydrogel networks
title_full Biomimetic strain-stiffening in fully synthetic dynamic-covalent hydrogel networks
title_fullStr Biomimetic strain-stiffening in fully synthetic dynamic-covalent hydrogel networks
title_full_unstemmed Biomimetic strain-stiffening in fully synthetic dynamic-covalent hydrogel networks
title_short Biomimetic strain-stiffening in fully synthetic dynamic-covalent hydrogel networks
title_sort biomimetic strain-stiffening in fully synthetic dynamic-covalent hydrogel networks
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10171040/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37181784
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3sc00011g
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