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Motivated by the perceived great potential of chiral polymers, the presented work aimed at the investigation of synthesis, solubility and optical activity of chiral poly(2,4-disubstituted-2-oxazoline)s. A novel polymeric carrier based on ABA-type triblock copolymers poly(2-oxazoline)s with chiral and racemic hydrophobic blocks was developed for the formulation of chiral and achiral drugs (Fig. 5.1). Poly(2-methyl-2-oxazoline) (pMeOx) was used as hydrophilic A block, and poly(2-ethyl-4-ethyl-2-oxazoline) (pEtEtOx) and poly(2-propyl-4-methyl-2-oxazoline) (pPrMeOx) were used as hydrophobic B blocks. Curcumin (CUR), paclitaxel (PTX) and chiral/racemic ibuprofen (R/S/RS-IBU) were applied as model drugs. Nanoformulations were prepared consisting of these triblock copolymers and model drugs. ...
Structure-property relationships in poly(2-oxazoline)/poly(2-oxazine) based drug formulations
(2020)
According to estimates, more than 40% of all new chemical entities developed in pharmaceutical industry are practically insoluble in water. Naturally, the demand for excipients which increase the water solubility and thus, the bioavailability of such hydrophobic drugs is enormous. Poly(2-oxazoline)s (POx) are currently intensively discussed as highly versatile class of biomaterials. Although selected POx based micellar drug formulations exhibit extraordinarily high drug loadings > 50 wt.% enabling high anti-tumor efficacies in vivo, the formulation of other hydrophobic compounds has failed. This casts doubt on the general understanding in which a hydrophobic active pharmaceutical ingredient is dissolved rather unspecifically in the hydrophobic core of the micelles following the fundamental concept of “like dissolves like”. Therefore, a closer look at the interactions between all components within a formulation becomes increasingly important. To do so, a large vehicle platform was synthesized, loaded with various hydrophobic drugs of different structure, and the formulations subsequently characterized with conventional and less conventional techniques. The obtained in-depth insights helped to develop a more thorough understanding about the interaction of polymer and incorporated API finally revealing morphologies deviating from a classical core/shell structure. During these studies, the scarcely investigated polymer class of poly(2-oxazine)s (POzi) was found as promising drug-delivery vehicle for hydrophobic drugs. Apart from this fundamental research, the anti-tumor efficacy of the two APIs curcumin and atorvastatin has been studied in more detail. To increase the scope of POx and POzi based formulations designed for intravenous administration, a curcumin loaded hydrogel was developed as injectable drug-depot.
In the past decade, poly(2-oxazoline)s (POx) and very recently poly(2-oxazine)s (POzi) based amphiphiles have shown great potential for medical applications. Therefore, the major aim of this thesis was to further explore the pharmaceutical and biomedical applications of POx/POzi based ABA triblock and AB diblock copolymers, respectively with the special emphasis on structure property relationship (SPR). ABA triblock copolymers (with shorter side chain length in the hydrophobic block) have shown high solubilizing capacity for hydrophobic drugs. The issue of poor aqueous solubility was initially addressed by developing a (micellar) formulation library of 21 highly diverse, hydrophobic drugs with POx/POzi based ABA triblock copolymers. Theoretically, the extent of compatibility between polymers and drug was determined by calculating solubility parameters (SPs). The SPs were thoroughly investigated to check their applicability in present systems. The selected formulations were further characterized by various physico-chemical techniques. For the biomedical applications, a novel thermoresposive diblock copolymer was synthesized which has shown promising properties to be used as hydrogel bioink or can potentially be used as fugitive support material. The most important aspect i.e. SPR, was studied with respect to hydrophilic block in either tri- or di-block copolymers. In triblock copolymer, the hydrophilic block played an important role for ultra high drug loading, while in case of diblock, it has improved the printability of the hydrogels. Apart from the basic research, the therapeutic applications of two formulations i.e. mitotane (commercially available as tablet dosage form for adrenocortical carcinoma) and BT-44 (lead compound for nerve regeneration) were studied in more detail.
Sensitivity and selectivity remain the central technical requirement for analytical devices, detectors and sensors. Especially in the gas phase, concentrations of threat substances can be very low (e.g. explosives) or have severe effects on health even at low concentrations (e.g. benzene) while it contains many potential interferents. Preconcentration, facilitated by active or passive sampling of air by an adsorbent, followed by thermal desorption, results in these substances being released in a smaller volume, effectively increasing their concentration.
Traditionally, a wide range of adsorbents, such as active carbons or porous polymers, are used for preconcentration. However, many adsorbents either show chemical reactions due to active surfaces, serious water retention or high background emission due to thermal instability. Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are a hybrid substance class, composed inorganic and organic building blocks, being a special case of coordination polymers containing pores. They can be tailored for specific applications such as gas storage, separation, catalysis, sensors or drug delivery.
This thesis is focused on investigating MOFs for their use in thermal preconcentration for airborne detection systems. A pre-screening method for MOF-adsorbate interactions was developed and applied, namely inverse gas chromatography (iGC). Using this pulse chromatographic method, the interaction of MOFs and molecules from the class of explosives and volatile organic compounds was studied at different temperatures and compared to thermal desorption results.
In the first part, it is shown that archetype MOFs (HKUST-1, MIL-53 and Fe-BTC) outperformed the state-of-the-art polymeric adsorbent Tenax® TA in nitromethane preconcentration for a 1000 (later 1) ppm nitromethane source. For HKUST-1, a factor of more than 2000 per g of adsorbent was achieved, about 100 times higher than for Tenax. Thereby, a nitromethane concentration of 1 ppb could be increased to 2 ppm. High enrichment is addressed to the specific interaction of the nitro group as by iGC, which was determined by comparing nitromethane’s free enthalpy of adsorption with the respective saturated alkane. Also, HKUST-1 shows a similar mode of sorption (enthalpy-entropy compensation) for nitro and saturated alkanes.
In the second part, benzene of 1 ppm of concentration was enriched with a similar setup, using 2nd generation MOFs, primarily UiO-66 and UiO-67, under dry and humid (50 %rH) conditions using constant sampling times. Not any MOF within the study did surpass the polymeric Tenax in benzene preconcentration. This is most certainly due to low sampling times – while Tenax may be highly saturated after 600 s, MOFs are not. For regular UiO-66, four differently synthesized samples showed a strongly varying behavior for dry and humid enrichment which cannot be completely explained. iGC investigations with regular alkanes and BTEX compounds revealed that confinement factors and dispersive surface energy were different for all UiO-66 samples. Using physicochemical parameters from iGC, no unified hypothesis explaining all variances could be developed.
Altogether, it was shown that MOFs can replace or add to state-of-the-art adsorbents for the enrichment of specific analytes with preconcentration being a universal sensitivity-boosting concept for detectors and sensors. Especially with iGC as a powerful screening tool, most suitable MOFs for the respective target analyte can be evaluated. iGC can be used for determining “single point” retention volumes, which translate into partition coefficients for a specific MOF × analyte × temperature combination.
The aim of this thesis was the preparation of a biomaterial ink for the fabrication of chemically crosslinked hydrogel scaffolds with low micron sized features using melt electrowriting (MEW). By developing a functional polymeric material based on 2-alkyl-2-oxazine (Ozi) and 2-alkyl-2-oxazoline (Ox) homo- and copolymers in combination with Diels-Alder (DA)-based dynamic covalent chemistry, it was possible to achieve this goal. This marks an important step for the additive manufacturing technique melt electrowriting (MEW), as soft and hydrophilic structures become available for the first time. The use of dynamic covalent chemistry is a very elegant and efficient method for consolidating covalent crosslinking with melt processing. It was shown that the high chemical versatility of the Ox and Ozi chemistry offers great potential to control the processing parameters. The established platform offers straight forward potential for modification with biological cues and fluorescent markers. This is essential for advanced biological applications. The physical properties of the material are readily controlled and the potential for 4D-printing was highlighted as well. The developed hydrogel architectures are excellent candidates for 3D cell culture applications. In particular, the low internal strength of some of the scaffolds in combination with the tendency of such constructs to collapse into thin strings could be interesting for the cultivation of muscle or nerve cells. In this context it was also possible to show that MEW printed hydrogel scaffolds can withstand the aspiration and ejection through a cannula. This allows the application as scaffolds for the minimally invasive delivery of implants or functional tissue equivalent structures to various locations in the human body.
In this work, the influence of aromatic structures on drug encapsulation, self-assembly and hydrogel formation was investigated. The physically crosslinked gelling systems were characterized and optimized for the use in biofabrication and applied in initial (bio)printing experiments.
Chapter I: The cytocompatible (first in vitro and in vivo studies) amphiphile PMeOx-b-PBzOx-b- PMeOx (A-PBzOx-A) was used for the solubilization of PTX, schizandrin A (SchA), curcumin (CUR), niraparib and HS-173.
Chapter II: Compared to the polymers A-PPheOx-A, A-PBzOx-A and A-PBzOzi-A, only the polymer A-PPheOzi-A showed a reversible temperature- and concentration-dependent inverse thermogelation, which is accompanied by a morphology change from long wormlike micelles in the gel to small spherical micelles in solution. The worm formation results from novel interactions between the hydrophilic and hydrophobic aromatic polymer blocks. Changes in the hydrophilic block significantly alter the gel system. Rheological properties can be optimized by concentration and temperature, which is why the hydrogel was used to significantly improve the printability and stability of Alg in a blend system.
Chapter III: By extending the side chain of the aromatic hydrophobic block, the inverse thermogelling polymer A-poly(2-phenethyl-2-oxazoline)-A (A-PPhenEtOx-A) is obtained. Rapid gelation upon cooling is achieved by inter-correlating spherical micelles. Based on ideal rheological properties, first cytocompatible bioprinting experiments were performed in combination with Alg. The polymers A- poly(2-benzhydryl-2-oxazoline)-A (A-PBhOx-A) and A-poly(2-benzhydryl-2-oxazine) (A-PBhOzi-A) are characterized by two aromatic benzyl units per hydrophobic repeating unit. Only the polymer A- PBhOzi-A exhibited inverse thermogelling behavior. Merging micelles could be observed by electron microscopy. The system was rheologically characterized and discussed with respect to an application in 3D printing.
Chapter IV: The thermogelling POx/POzi system, in particular the block copolymer PMeOx-b- PnPrOzi, was used in different applications in the field of biofabrication. The introduction of maleimide and furan units along the hydrophilic polymer part ensured additional stabilization by Diels-Alder crosslinking after the printing process.
Motivated by the great potential which is offered by the combination of additive manufacturing and tissue engineering, a novel polymeric bioink platform based on poly(2 oxazoline)s was developed which might help to further advance the young and upcoming field of biofabrication. In the present thesis, the synthesis as well as the characteristics of several diblock copolymers consisting of POx and POzi have been investigated with a special focus on their suitability as bioinks.
In general, the copolymerization of 2-oxazolines and 2-oxazines bearing different alkyl side chains was demonstrated to yield polymers in good agreement with the degree of polymerization aimed for and moderate to low dispersities.
For every diblock copolymer synthesized during the present study, a more or less pronounced dependency of the dynamic viscosity on temperature could be demonstrated. Diblock copolymers comprising a hydrophilic PMeOx block and a thermoresponsive PnPrOzi block showed temperature induced gelation above a degree of polymerization of 50 and a polymer concentration of 20 wt%. Such a behavior has never been described before for copolymers solely consisting of poly(cyclic imino ether)s.
Physically cross linked hydrogels based on POx b POzi copolymers exhibit reverse thermal gelation properties like described for solutions of PNiPAAm and Pluronic F127. However, by applying SANS, DLS, and SLS it could be demonstrated that the underlying gel formation mechanism is different for POx b POzi based hydrogels. It appears that polymersomes with low polydispersity are formed already at very low polymer concentrations of 6 mg/L. Increasing the polymer concentration resulted in the formation of a bicontinuous sponge like structure which might be formed due to the merger of several vesicles. For longer polymer chains a phase transition into a gyroid structure was postulated and corresponds well with the observed rheological data.
Stable hydrogels with an unusually high mechanical strength (G’ ~ 4 kPa) have been formed above TGel which could be adjusted over a range of 20 °C by changing the degree of polymerization if maintaining the symmetric polymer architecture. Variations of the chain ends revealed only a minor influence on TGel whereas the influence of the solvent should not be neglected as shown by a comparison of cell culture medium and MilliQ water.
Rotationally as well as oscillatory rheological measurements revealed a high suitability for printing as POx b POzi based hydrogels exhibit strong shear thinning behavior in combination with outstanding recovery properties after high shear stress.
Cell viability assays (WST-1) of PMeOx b PnPrOzi copolymers against NIH 3T3 fibroblasts and HaCat cells indicated that the polymers were well tolerated by the cells as no dose-dependent cytotoxicity could be observed after 24 h at non-gelling concentrations up to 100 g/L.
In summary, copolymers consisting of POx and POzi significantly increased the accessible range of properties of POx based materials. In particular thermogelation of aqueous solutions of diblock copolymers comprising PMeOx and PnPrOzi was never described before for any copolymer consisting solely of POx or POzi. In combination with other characteristics, e.g. very good cytocompatibility at high polymer concentrations and comparably high mechanical strength, the formed hydrogels could be successfully used for 3D bioprinting. Although the results appear promising and the developed hydrogel is a serious bioink candidate, competition is tough and it remains an open question which system or systems will be used in the future.
Motivated by the great potential offered by the combination of additive manufacturing technology and hydrogels, especially in the field of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine, a series of novel hybrid hydrogel inks were developed based on the recently described thermogelling poly(2-oxazoline)s-block-poly(2-oxazine)s diblock copolymers, which may help to expand the platform of available hydrogel inks for this transformative 3D printing technology (Fig. 5.1).
In the present thesis, the first reported thermogelling polymer solely consisting of POx and POzi, i.e., the diblock copolymer PMeOx-b-PnPrOzi comprising a hydrophilic block (PMeOx) and a thermoresponsive block (PnPrOzi), was selected and used as a proof-of-concept for the preparation of three novel hybrid hydrogels. Therefore, three batches of the diblock copolymers with a DP of 100 were synthesized for the study of three different hybrid hydrogels with a special focus on their suitability as (bio)inks for extrusion-based 3D printing. The PMeOx-b-PnPrOzi diblock copolymer solution shows a temperature induced reversible gelation behavior above a critical polymer concentration of 20 wt%, as described for the Pluronic F127 solution but with a unique gelation mechanism, working through the formation of a bicontinuous sponge-like structure from the physically crosslinked vesicles. Specially, its intrinsic shear thinning behavior and excellent recovery property with a certain yield point make it a promising ink candidate for extrusion-based printing technology.
Increasing the polymer concentration is the most traditional approach to improve the printability of an ink material, and serve as the major strategy available to improve the printability of PMeOx-b-PnPrOzi systems prior to this work. From the analysis of rheological properties related to printability, it came a conclusion that increasing the copolymer concentration does improve the hydrogel strength and thus the printability. However, such improvement is very limited and usually leads to other problems such as more viscous systems and stringent requirements on the printers, which are not ideal for the printing process and applications especially in the cell-embedded biofabrication field.
POx-b-POzi/clay Hybrid Hydrogel
An alternative method proposed to improve the printability of this thermoresponsive hydrogel ink is through nanoclay (Laponite XLG) addition, i.e., the first hybrid hydrogel system of PMeOx-b-PnPrOzi/clay (also named shortly as POx-b-POzi/clay) in this thesis. To optimize the viscoelastic properties of the ink material, Laponite XLG acted as a reinforcement additive and a physically crosslinker was blended with the copolymers. Compared with the pristine copolymer solution of PMeOx-b-PnPrOzi, the hybrid PMeOx-b-PnPrOzi/clay solution well retained the temperature induced gelation performance of the copolymers.
The obtained hybrid hydrogels exhibited a rapid in situ reversible thermogelation at a physiological relevant Tgel of around 15 ℃ and a rapid recovery of viscoelastic properties within a few seconds. More importantly, with the addition of only a small amount of 1.2 wt% clay, it exhibited obviously enhanced shear thinning character (n = 0.02), yield stress (240 Pa) and mechanical strength (storage modulus over 5 kPa). With this novel hybrid hydrogel, real three-dimensional constructs with multiple layers and various geometries are generation with greatly enhanced shape fidelity and resolution. In this context, the thermogelling properties of the hybrid hydrogels over a copolymer concentration range of 10-20 wt% and a clay concentration of 0-4 wt% were systematically investigated, and from which a printable window was obtained from the laboratory as a reference.
In fact, the printing performance of an ink is not only determined by the intrinsic physicochemical properties of the material, but is also influenced by the external printing environments as well as the printer parameter settings. All the printing experiments in this study were conducted under a relatively optimized conditions obtained from preliminary experiments. In future work, the relationship between material rheology properties, printer parameters and printing performance could be systematically explored. Such a fundamental study will help to develop models that allows the prediction and comparison of printing results from different researches based on the parameters available through rheology, which is very beneficial for further development of more advanced ink systems.
Although the printability has been significantly improved by the addition of nanoclay Laponite XLG, the hybrid hydrogels and their printed constructs still suffer from some major limitations. For example, these materials are still thermoresponsive, which will cause the printed constructs to collapse when the environment temperature changes below their Tgel. In addition, the formed hydrogel constructs are mechanical too weak for load-bearing applications, and the allowed incubation time is very limited during media exchange/addition as it will lead to dissolution of the hydrogels due to dilution effects. Therefore, it is essential to establish a second (chemical or physical) crosslinking mechanism that allows further solidification of the gels after printing. It should be kept in mind that the second crosslinking step will eliminate the thermoresponsive behavior of the gels and thus the possibility of cell recovery. In this case, besides through the traditional approach of copolymer modification to realize further crosslinking, like one of the well-known post-polymerization modification approach Diels-Alder reaction,[430] designing of interpenetrating networks (IPN) hydrogels serves as one of the major strategy for advanced (bio)ink preparation.[311] Therefore, the second hybrid hydrogel system of PMeOx-b-PnPrOzi/PDMAA/clay (also named shortly as POx-b-POzi/PDMAA/clay) was developed in this thesis, which is a 3D printable and highly stretchable ternary organic-inorganic IPN hydrogel.
POx-b-POzi/PDMAA/clay Hybrid Hydrogel
The nanocomposite IPN hydrogel combines a thermoresponsive hydrogel with clay described above and in situ polymerized poly(N, N-dimethylacrylamide). Before in situ polymerization, the thermoresponsive hydrogel precursors exhibited thermogelling behavior (Tgel ~ 25 ℃, G' ~ 6 kPa) and shear thinning properties, making the system well-suited for extrusion-based 3D printing. After chemical curing of the 3D-printed constructs by free radical polymerization, the resulting IPN hydrogels show excellent mechanical strength with a high stretchability to a tensile strain at break exceeding 550%. The hybrid hydrogel can sustain a high stretching deformation and recover quickly due to the energy dissipation from the non-covalent interactions. With this hybrid hydrogel, integrating with the advanced 3D-printing technique, various 3D constructs can be printed and cured successfully with high shape fidelity and geometric accuracy.
In this context, we also investigated the possibility of acrylic acid (AA) and 2-hydroxyethylmethacrylate (HEMA) as alternative hydrogel precursors. However, the addition of these two monomers affected the thermogelation of POx-b-POzi in an unfavorable manner, as these monomers competed more effectively with water molecules, preventing the hydration of nPrOzi block at lower temperatures and therefore, the liquefaction of the gels. Furthermore, the influence of the printing process and direction on the mechanical properties of the hydrogel was investigated and compared with the corresponding bulk materials obtained from a mold. No significant effects from the additive manufacturing process were observed due to a homogeneously adhesion and merging between sequentially deposited layers. In the future, further studies on the specific performance differences among hydrogels fabricated at different printing directions/speeds would be of great interest to the community, as this allows for a more accurately control and better predict of the printed structures.
This newly developed hybrid IPN hydrogel is expected to expand the material toolbox available for hydrogel-based 3D printing, and may be interesting for a wide range of applications including tissue engineering, drug delivery, soft robotics, and additive manufacturing in general. However, in this case, the low toxicity from the monomer DMAA and other small molecules residuals in the polymerized hydrogels made this hybrid hydrogel not ideal for bioprinting in the field of biofabrication. For this problem, cyto-/biocompatible monomers such as polyethylene glycol diacrylate (PEGDA) can be used as an alternative, while the overall properties of the hydrogels including mechanical properties should be re-evaluated accordingly. Moreover, the swelling behavior of the hydrogels should also be taken into account, as it may most likely affect the mechanical strength and geometry size of the printed scaffold, but is often be overlooked after printing. For example, regarding the specific hybrid hydrogel POx-b-POzi/PDMAA/clay in this work, an equilibrium swelling ratio of 1100% was determined. The printed hydrogel cuboid experienced a volume increasing over 6-fold after equilibrium swelling in water, and became mechanical fragile due to the formation of a swollen hydrogel network absorbing large amount of water.
POx-b-POzi/Alg/clay Hybrid Hydrogel
In the final part of this dissertation, to enable the cell-loaded bioprinting and long-term cell culture, the third hybrid hydrogel system POx-b-POzi/Alg/clay was introduced by replacing the monomer DMAA to the natural polysaccharides alginate. Initially, detailed rheological characterization and mechanical tests were performed to evaluate their printability and mechanically properties. Subsequently, some simple patterns were printed with the optimized hydrogel precursor solutions for the preliminary filament fusion and collapse test before proceeding to more complex printings. The fibers showed a sufficient stability which allows the creation of large structures with a height of a few centimeters and a suspended filament up to centimeter. Accordingly, various 3D constructs including suspended filaments were printed successfully with high stackability and shape fidelity. The structure after extrusion was physical crosslinked easily by soaking in CaCl2 solution and, thereafter exhibited a good mechanical flexibility and long-term stability. Interestingly, the mechanical strength and geometry size of the generated scaffolds were well maintained over a culture period of weeks in water, which is of great importance for clinical applications. In addition, the post-printing ionic crosslinking of alginate could also be realized by other di/trivalent cations such as Fe3+ and Tb3+.
Subsequently, the cell-laden printing with this hybrid hydrogel and post-printing crosslinking by Ca2+ ions highlighting its feasibility for 3D bioprinting. WST-1 assay of fibroblast suggested no-dose dependent cytocompatibility of the hydrogel precursor solution. The cell distribution was uniform throughout the printed construct, and proliferated with high cell viability during the 21 days culture. The presented hybrid approach, utilizing the beneficial properties of the POx-b-POzi base material, could be interesting for a wide range of bioprinting applications and potentially enabling also other biological bioinks such as collagen, hyaluronic acid, decellularized extracellular matrix or cellulose based bioinks. Although the results look promising and the developed hydrogel is an important bioink candidate, the long-term in vitro cell studies with different cell lines and clinical model establishment are still under investigation, which remains a long road but is of great importance before realizing real clinical application.
Last but not least, the improvement to the printability of thermogelling POx/POzi-based copolymers by the clay Laponite XLG was also demonstrated in another thermogelling copolymer PEtOx-b-PnPrOzi. This suggests that the addition of clay may be a general strategy to improve the printability of such polymers. Despite these advances in this work which significantly extended the (bio)material platform of additive manufacturing technology, the competition is still fierce and more work should be done in the further to reveal the potential and limitations of this kind of new and promising candidate (bio)ink materials. It is also highly expected for further creative works based on the thermogelling POx/POzi polymers, such as crosslinking in Ca2+ solution containing monomer acrylamide to prepare printable and mechanically tough hydrogels, research on POx-based support bath material, and print of clinically more relevant sophisticated structures such as 3D microvascular networks omnidirectionally.
Articular cartilage defects represent one of the most challenging clinical problem for orthopedic surgeons and cartilage damage after trauma can result in debilitating joint pain, functional impairment and in the long-term development of osteoarthritis. The lateral cartilage-cartilage integration is crucial for the long-term success and to prevent further tissue degeneration. Tissue adhesives and sealants are becoming increasingly more popular and can be a beneficial approach in fostering tissue integration, particularly in tissues like cartilage where alternative techniques, such as suturing, would instead introduce further damage. However, adhesive materials still require optimization regarding the maximization of adhesion strength on the one hand and long-term tissue integration on the other hand. In vitro models can be a valuable support in the investigation of potential candidates and their functional mechanisms. For the conducted experiments within this work, an in vitro disc/ring model obtained from porcine articular cartilage tissue was established. In addition to qualitative evaluation of regeneration, this model facilitates the implementation of biomechanical tests to quantify cartilage integration strength. Construct harvesting for histology and other evaluation methods could be standardized and is ethically less questionable compared to in vivo testing. The opportunity of cell culture technique application for the in vitro model allowed a better understanding of cartilage integration processes.
Tissue bonding requires chemical or physical interaction of the adhesive material and the substrate. Adhesive hydrogels can bind to the defect interface and simultaneously fill the gap of irregularly shaped defect voids. Fibrin gels are derived from the physiological blood-clot formation and are clinically applied for wound closure. Within this work, comparisons of different fibrin glue formulations with the commercial BioGlue® were assessed, which highlighted the need for good biocompatibility when applied on cartilage tissue in order to achieve satisfying long-term integration. Fibrin gel formulations can be adapted with regard to their long-term stability and when applied on cartilage disc/ring constructs improved integrative repair is observable. The kinetic of repairing processes was investigated in fibrin-treated cartilage composites as part of this work. After three days in vitro cultivation, deposited extracellular matrix (ECM) was obvious at the glued interface that increased further over time. Interfacial cell invasion from the surrounding native cartilage was detected from day ten of tissue culture. The ECM formation relies on molecular factors, e.g., as was shown representatively for ascorbic acid, and contributes to increasing integration strengths over time. The experiments performed with fibrin revealed that the treatment with a biocompatible adhesive that allows cartilage neosynthesis favors lateral cartilage integration in the long term. However, fibrin has limited immediate bonding strength, which is disadvantageous for use on articular cartilage that is subject to high mechanical stress. The continuing aim of this thesis was to further develop adhesive mechanisms and new adhesive hydrogels that retain the positive properties of fibrin but have an increased immediate bonding strength.
Two different photochemical approaches with the advantage of on-demand bonding were tested. Such treatment potentially eases the application for the professional user. First, an UV light induced crosslinking mechanism was transferred to fibrin glue to provide additional bonding strength. For this, the cartilage surface was functionalized with highly reactive light-sensitive diazirine groups, which allowed additional covalent bonds to the fibrin matrix and thus increased the adhesive strength. However, the disadvantages of this approach were the multi-step bonding reactions, the need for enzymatic pretreatment of the cartilage, expensive reagents, potential UV-light damage, and potential toxicity hazards. Due to the mentioned disadvantages, no further experiments, including long-term culture, were carried out. A second photosensitive approach focused on blue light induced crosslinking of fibrinogen (RuFib) via a photoinitiator molecule instead of using thrombin as a crosslinking mediator like in normal fibrin glue. The used ruthenium complex allowed inter- and intramolecular dityrosine binding of fibrinogen molecules. The advantage of this method is a one-step curing of fibrinogen via visible light that further achieved higher adhesive strengths than fibrin. In contrast to diazirine functionalization of cartilage, the ruthenium complex is of less toxicological concern. However, after in vitro cultivation of the disc/ring constructs, there was a decrease in integration strength. Compared to fibrin, a reduced cartilage synthesis was observed at the defect. It is also disadvantageous that a direct adjustment of the adhesive can only be made via protein concentration, since fibrinogen is a natural protein that has a fixed number of tyrosine binding sites without chemical modification.
An additional cartilage adhesive was developed that is based on a mussel-inspired adhesive mechanism in which reactivity to a variety of substrates is enabled via free DOPA amino acids. DOPA-based adhesion is known to function in moist environments, a major advantage for application on water-rich cartilage tissue surrounded by synovial liquid. Reactive DOPA groups were synthetically attached to a polymer, here POx, to allow easy chemical modifiability, e.g. insertion of hydrolyzable ester motifs for tunable degradation. The possibility of preparing an adhesive hybrid hydrogel of POx in combination with fibrinogen led to good cell compatibility as was similarly observed with fibrin, but with increased immediate adhesive strength. Degradation could be adjusted by the amount of ester linkages on the POx and a direct influence of degradation rates on the development of integration in the in vitro model could be shown.
Hydrogels are well suited to fill defect gaps and immediate integration can be achieved via adhesive properties. The results obtained show that for the success of long-term integration, a good ability of the adhesive to take up synthesized ECM components and cells to enable regeneration is required. The degradation kinetics of the adhesive must match the remodeling process to avoid intermediate loss of integration power and to allow long-term firm adhesion to the native tissue.
Hydrogels are not only important as adhesives for smaller lesions, but also for filling large defect volumes and populating them with cells to produce tissue engineered cartilage. Many different hydrogel types suitable for cartilage synthesis are reported in the literature. A long-term stable fibrin formulation was tested in this work not only as an adhesive but also as a bulk hydrogel construct. Agarose is also a material widely used in cartilage tissue engineering that has shown good cartilage neosynthesis and was included in integration assessment. In addition, a synthetic hyaluronic acid-based hydrogel (HA SH/P(AGE/G)) was used. The disc/ring construct was adapted for such experiments and the inner lumen of the cartilage ring was filled with the respective hydrogel. In contrast to agarose, fibrin and HA-SH/P(AGE/G) gels have a crosslink mechanism that led to immediate bonding upon contact with cartilage during curing. The enhanced cartilage neosynthesis in agarose compared to the other hydrogel types resulted in improved integration during in vitro culture. This shows that for the long-term success of a treatment, remodeling of the hydrogel into functional cartilage tissue is a very high priority. In order to successfully treat larger cartilage defects with hydrogels, new materials with these properties in combination with chemical modifiability and a direct adhesion mechanism are one of the most promising approaches.
The present work aims towards the investigation of polymer degradation under biologically relevant conditions. In order to assess a potential degradation of polymers of interest for biomedical applications in vivo and associated effects on living tissue, representatives of poly(2-oxazoline)s and polypeptoids as well as poly(ethylene glycol) and poly(N-vinylpyrrolidone) for reference purposes are examined regarding their stability under oxidative and hydrolytic conditions as well as towards enzymatic degradation.
The polymers investigated in the framework of this thesis are generally considered to be non-biodegradable. Both poly(ethylene glycol) and poly(N-vinylpyrrolidone) are or were applied intensively in vivo provoking seriously harmful side effects like fatal blood poisoning from the oxidation of poly(ethylene glycol) chain ends or poly(N-vinylpyrrolidone) storage disease. Poly(2-alkyl-2-oxazoline)s and polypeptoids, both promising polymeric biomaterials for a wide variety of in vivo applications, are not clinically applied yet but undergo thorough investigations. However, comprising amide bonds within the backbone or the appending side chain, poly(2-alkyl-2-oxazoline)s and polypeptoids potentially offer a higher susceptibility towards (bio-)degradation. Representing the three most impactful initiators of degradation in vivo, the present study is focused on polymer deterioration by oxidative species, hydrolytic conditions and enzymes.
Oxidative species are generated in a variety of processes in vivo, both on purpose and as an unintentional by-product. Previous investigations revealed the susceptibility of poly(ethylene glycol), poly(N-vinylpyrrolidone), poly(2-alkyl-2-oxazoline)s and polypeptoids to deterioration by hydroxyl radicals deriving from hydrogen peroxide and copper ions. The obtained data confirm previous results of an apparent degradation rate increasing with increasing chain length due to self-inhibitory end group effects for all investigated polymer species. Although the exact concentrations of oxidative species in vivo are very controversial, with respect to their great variety and wide distribution the investigated polymers are likely prone to oxidative deterioration to some extent, with rates, mechanisms and degradation products strongly depending on the respective reactive species, polymer structure and chain length.
Like blood, most tissues of the human body benefit from a slightly alkaline pH value. Nevertheless, specific areas like the human stomach or tumor tissues possess acidic conditions potentially capable to cleave amide bonds comprised by poly(2-alkyl-2-oxazoline)s and polypeptoids. Unlike the hydrolysis of poly(2-alkyl-2-oxazoline)s resulting in side chain cleavage, the hydrolysis of polypeptoids induces backbone scission decreasing the polymer chain length tremendously and releasing, if performed exhaustively, the respective amino acids. Hydrolysis of polysarcosine is monitored by quantification of the released sarcosine via 1H-NMR spectroscopy and determination of the residual Mw via GPC. Its cyclic dimer sarcosine anhydride is formed as an intermediate product in this process via cyclization of unstable linear dimers of sarcosine.
Modification and degradation of bio(macro)molecules is an essential part of human metabolism. Polymers bearing amide bonds and showing a great similarity to natural occurring and widely distributed polypeptides, like poly(2-alkyl-2-oxazoline)s and polypeptoids, bear the potential of an enzymatic biodegradability by (more or less specific) peptidases. Just like the acidic hydrolysis described previously, peptidase activity would result in the cleavage of polymer amide bonds. The aim of the present thesis was to evaluate the stability of poly(2-alkyl-2-oxazoline)s and polypeptoids as well as poly(ethylene glycol) for the sake of reference under circumstances resembling in vivo conditions as closely as possible. Initial experiments focused on the degradation of dye-labeled upon incubation with homogenates of freshly harvested rat liver and kidney. However, although the obtained results are promising for the most part, they are considered rather unreliable and non-reproducible for various reasons. More conclusive data are attained from the incubation of non-labeled polymers in freshly laid chicken eggs. While no evidence for an enzymatic digestion of poly(ethylene glycol) in chicken egg white is found and deterioration of poly(2-methyl-2-oxazoline) upon incubation apparently derives from non-enzymatic hydrolysis, incubated polysarcosine samples reveal distinct elugram patterns depending on the respective C- and N-terminal end groups indicating both exopeptidase and endopeptidase activity. It has to be kept in mind though, that an enzymatic digestibility of polysarcosine does not necessarily imply the digestion of polypeptoids bearing longer side chains by peptidases as well, which should be investigated in further studies.