- Prof. Dr. Zhiyuan Zhong
- Soochow University College of Pharmaceutical Sciences
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- 6th Symposium on Innovative Polymers for Controlled Delivery (SIPCD 2020)
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Our previous studies have shown that stereocomplexed hydrogels can be rapidly formed in vitro as well as in vivo upon mixing aqueous solutions of eight-arm poly( ethylene glycol)-poly(L-lactide) (PEGPLLA) and poly( ethylene glycol)-poly( D-lactide) (PEG-PDLA) star block copolymers. In this study, stereocomplexation and photopolymerization are combined to yield rapidly in situ forming robust hydrogels. Two types of methacrylate-functionalized PEG-PLLA and PEG-PDLA star block copolymers, PEG-PLLAMA and PEG-PDLA-MA, which have methacrylate groups at the PLA chain ends and PEG-MA/PLLA and PEG-MA/PDLA, which have methacrylate groups at the PEG chain ends, were designed and prepared. Results showed that stereocomplexed hydrogels could be rapidly formed ( within 1-2 min) in a polymer concentration range of 12.5-17.5% (w/v), in which the methacrylate group hardly interfered with the stereocomplexation. When subsequently photopolymerized, these hydrogels showed largely increased storage moduli as compared to the corresponding hydrogels that were cross-linked by stereocomplexation or photopolymerization only. Interestingly, the storage modulus of stereocomplexed-photopolymerized PEG-PLA-MA hydrogels increased linearly with increasing stereocomplexation equilibration time prior to photopolymerization ( from ca. 6 to 32 kPa), indicating that stereocomplexation aids in photopolymerization. Importantly, photopolymerization of stereocomplexed hydrogels could take place at very low initiator concentrations (0.003 wt %). Swelling/degradation studies showed that combining stereocomplexation and photopolymerization yielded hydrogels with prolonged degradation times as compared to corresponding hydrogels cross-linked by photopolymerization only ( 3 vs 1.5 weeks). Stereocomplexed-photopolymerized PEG-MA/PLA hydrogels degraded much slower than corresponding PEG-PLA-MA hydrogels, with degradation times ranging from 7 to more than 16 weeks. Therefore, combining stereocomplexation and photopolymerization is a novel approach to obtain rapidly in situ forming robust hydrogels.