Dopamine-Modified Hyaluronic Acid Hydrogel Adhesives with Fast-Forming and High Tissue Adhesion

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Authors

Zhou, Ding
Li, Shangzhi
Pei, Minjie
Yang, Hongjun
Gu, Shaojin
Tao, Yongzhen
Ye, Dezhan
Zhou, Yingshan
Xu, Weilin
Xiao, Pu

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Abstract

Commercial or clinical tissue adhesives are currently limited due to their weak bonding strength on wet biological tissue surface, low biological compatibility, and slow adhesion formation. Although catechol-modified hyaluronic acid (HA) adhesives are developed, they suffer from limitations: insufficient adhesiveness and overfast degradation, attributed to low substitution of catechol groups. In this study, we demonstrate a simple and efficient strategy to prepare mussel-inspired HA hydrogel adhesives with improved degree of substitution of catechol groups. Because of the significantly increased grafting ratio of catechol groups, dopamine-conjugated dialdehyde-HA (DAHA) hydrogels exhibit excellent tissue adhesion performance (i.e., adhesive strength of 90.0 +- 6.7 kPa), which are significantly higher than those found in dopamine-conjugated HA hydrogels (∼10 kPa), photo-cross-linkable HA hydrogels (∼13 kPa), or commercially available fibrin glues (2-40 kPa). At the same time, their maximum adhesion energy is 384.6 +- 26.0 J m-2, which also is 40-400-fold, 2-40-fold, and ∼8-fold higher than those of the mussel-based adhesive, cyanoacrylate, and fibrin glues, respectively. Moreover, the hydrogels can gel rapidly within 60 s and have a tunable degradation suitable for tissue regeneration. Together with their cytocompatibility and good cell adhesion, they are promising materials as new biological adhesives.

Description

Citation

Source

ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2099-12-31

Downloads