Poly(vinyl alcohol)-methacrylate with CRGD peptide: A photocurable biocompatible hydrogel

Citation:

Goldvaser, M. ; Epstein, E. ; Rosen, O. ; Jayson, A. ; Natan, N. ; Ben-Shalom, T. ; Saphier, S. ; Katalan, S. ; Shoseyov, O. . Poly(Vinyl Alcohol)-Methacrylate With Crgd Peptide: A Photocurable Biocompatible Hydrogel. Journal of Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine 2021, n/a.

Abstract:

Abstract Polyvinyl alcohol (PVA)-based hydrogels are promising biomaterials for tissue engineering printing applications. However, one of their main disadvantages is their inability to support cell attachment, which is a critical feature for the preparation of biological scaffolds. The goal of this study was to develop a printable, cell-supportive PVA-based bioink with tunable mechanical properties, without using animal-derived polymers which potentially harbor human pathogens. An ultraviolet light (UV) curable PVA-methacrylate (PVA-MA) polymer mixed with Cys-Arg-Gly-Asp (CRGD) peptide was developed. This peptide holds the integrin receptor binding sequence – RGD, that can enhance cell attachment. The additional cysteine was designed to enable its thiol binding under UV to methacrylate groups of the UV curable PVA-MA. Vero cell, as an adherent cell model was used to assess the hydrogel's cell adhesion. It was found that the PVA-MA-CRGD formula enables the preparation of hydrogels with excellent cell attachment and had even shown superior cell attachment properties relative to added gelatin. Adding hyaluronic acid (HA) as a rheologic modulator enabled the printing of this new formula. Our overall data demonstrates the applicability of this mixture as a bioink for soft tissue engineering such as skin, adipose, liver or kidney tissue.

Publisher's Version

Last updated on 12/13/2021