Sameera Khatib, Poornima Ramburrun, Yahya E Choonara
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Gellan gum (GG) is a promising biomaterial due to its biocompatibility, tunable gelation, and modifiability. This study investigates the influence of triple crosslinking mechanisms-thermal gelation, UV-induced covalent crosslinking, and ionic crosslinking-on the mechanical and physicochemical properties of GG-based hydrogels, designed to function as a neuromaterial with hierarchical neuro-architecture as a potential nerve substitute for peripheral nerve injury. Initial thermal gelation forms a physical network via double-helix junctions. Methacrylation introduces vinyl groups enabling UV crosslinking, while post-treatment with Mg2+ ions strengthens the network through ionic bridging with carboxylate groups. Plasticizers-glycerol and triethyl citrate-were incorporated to modulate chain mobility, network hydration, swelling behavior, and mechanical flexibility. Seven-day erosion studies showed that glycerol-containing hydrogels eroded 50-60% faster than those with triethyl citrate and up to 70% more than hydrogels without plasticizers, indicating increased hydrophilicity and matrix loosening. In contrast, triethyl citrate reduced erosion, likely due to tighter polymer chain interactions and reduced network porosity. Mechanical testing of 1% v/v methacrylated GG hydrogels revealed that 1.5% v/v triethyl citrate combined with UV curing (30-45 min) produced tensile strengths of 8.76-10.84 MPa. These findings underscore the synergistic effect of sequential crosslinking and plasticizer choice in tuning hydrogel mechanical properties for neuro application. The resulting hydrogels offer potential as a neuromaterial in peripheral nerve injury where gradient mechanical properties with hydration-responsive behavior are required.
期刊介绍:
The journal Gels (ISSN 2310-2861) is an international, open access journal on physical (supramolecular) and chemical gel-based materials. Our aim is to encourage scientists to publish their experimental and theoretical results in as much detail as possible. Therefore, there is no restriction on the maximum length of the papers, and full experimental details must be provided so that the results can be reproduced. Short communications, full research papers and review papers are accepted formats for the preparation of the manuscripts.
Gels aims to serve as a reference journal with a focus on gel materials for researchers working in both academia and industry. Therefore, papers demonstrating practical applications of these materials are particularly welcome. Occasionally, invited contributions (i.e., original research and review articles) on emerging issues and high-tech applications of gels are published as special issues.