Access to biocompatible self-assembled gels and microgels is of great interests for a variety of biological applications from tissue engineering to drug delivery. Here, the facile synthesis of supramolecular hydrogels of norbornene (nb)-functionalised chitosan (CS-nb) via UV-triggered self-assembly in the presence of Irgacure 2959 (IRG) is reported. The in vitro stable hydrogels are injectable and showed pH-responsive swelling behaviour, while their structure and mechanical properties could be tuned by tailoring the stereochemistry of the norbornene derivative (e.g. endo-or-exo). Interestingly, unlike other nb-type hydrogels, the gels possess nanopores within their structure, which might lead to potential drug delivery applications. A gelation mechanism was proposed based on hydrophobic interactions following the combination of IRG on norbornene, as supported by 1H NMR. This self-assembly mechanism was used to access microgels of size 100-150 nm which could be further functionalised and showed no significant toxicity to human dermofibroblast cells. File list (2) download file view on ChemRxiv exo-endo-gels .pdf (1.14 MiB) download file view on ChemRxiv ESI exo-endo gels.pdf (1.17 MiB)
<p><br></p><p> Access to biocompatible self-assembled gels and microgels is of great interests for a variety of biological applications from tissue engineering to drug delivery. Here, the facile synthesis of supramolecular hydrogels of norbornene (nb)-functionalised chitosan (CS-nb) via UV-triggered self-assembly in the presence of Irgacure 2959 (IRG) is reported. The <i>in vitro </i>stable hydrogels are injectable and showed pH-responsive swelling behaviour, while their structure and mechanical properties could be tuned by tailoring the stereochemistry of the norbornene derivative (e.g. <i>endo</i>- or -<i>exo</i>). Interestingly, unlike other nb-type hydrogels, the gels possess nanopores within their structure, which might lead to potential drug delivery applications. A gelation mechanism was proposed based on hydrophobic interactions following the combination of IRG on norbornene, as supported by 1H NMR. This self-assembly mechanism was used to access microgels of size 100-150 nm which could be further functionalised and showed no significant toxicity to human dermofibroblast cells. </p>
<p><br></p><p> Access to biocompatible self-assembled gels and microgels is of great interests for a variety of biological applications from tissue engineering to drug delivery. Here, the facile synthesis of supramolecular hydrogels of norbornene (nb)-functionalised chitosan (CS-nb) via UV-triggered self-assembly in the presence of Irgacure 2959 (IRG) is reported. The <i>in vitro </i>stable hydrogels are injectable and showed pH-responsive swelling behaviour, while their structure and mechanical properties could be tuned by tailoring the stereochemistry of the norbornene derivative (e.g. <i>endo</i>- or -<i>exo</i>). Interestingly, unlike other nb-type hydrogels, the gels possess nanopores within their structure, which might lead to potential drug delivery applications. A gelation mechanism was proposed based on hydrophobic interactions following the combination of IRG on norbornene, as supported by 1H NMR. This self-assembly mechanism was used to access microgels of size 100-150 nm which could be further functionalised and showed no significant toxicity to human dermofibroblast cells. </p>
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