Synthesis of a New PHEMA/PEO Enzymatically Biodegradable Hydrogel
✍ Scribed by Nawel S. Khelfallah; Gero Decher; Philippe J. Mésini
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 149 KB
- Volume
- 27
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1022-1336
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Summary: We report the synthesis of a new enzymatically degradable gel based on PHEMA and PEO crosslinking macromonomer. The crosslinker contains the tripeptide sequence Gly‐Gly‐Leu, which is a substrate for proteases such as subtilisin or chymotrypsin. The crosslinker was obtained by the coupling reaction of succinyl‐glycyl‐glycyl‐leucine with 2‐aminoethyl‐terminated PEO chains ($\overline M _{\rm w}$ = 3 400) and subsequent esterification of the hydroxyl endgroup with methacryloyl chloride. It was characterized by SEC and ^1^H NMR. Enzymatic cleavage of the crosslinking macromonomer was showed by SEC. The macromonomer was copolymerized with HEMA to yield hydrogel that is stable in a physiological buffer. Enzymatic assay showed that this gel is degraded in the presence of a bacterial protease (subtilisin). The degradation is complete within 50 d at 37 °C. This new gel is a good candidate for drug‐delivery systems where the release can be triggered by the presence of bacterial proteases.
PHEMA crosslinked with MA‐PEG‐SucGGL‐PEO‐MA and its degradation by subtilisin.
magnified imagePHEMA crosslinked with MA‐PEG‐SucGGL‐PEO‐MA and its degradation by subtilisin.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Enzymatic polymerization denotes an in vitro polymerization via nonbiosynthetic pathways catalyzed by an isolated enzyme. This article describes the recent progress of this polymerization technique, developed mainly during this decade. The polymerization utilizes enzymes of hydrolases and oxidoreduc