Compared to conventional wound closure methods like sutures and staples, polymer-based tissue adhesives afford some distinct advantages, such as greater ease of deployment in spatially constrained surgical sites. One way to achieve aqueous adhesion is by introducing catechol functional groups that form coordinate and covalent bonds with a variety of substrates. This approach, inspired by marine organisms, has been applied to biopolymers and synthetic polymers, but one key challenge is that compositions that are soluble in water are often susceptible to high swelling ratios that can result in undesired compression of neighboring tissues. This work sought to synthesize aqueous adhesive gels that are capable of two modes of association: (1) adhesion and covalent cross-linking reactions arising from catechol oxidation and (2) noncovalent cross-linking arising from self-assembly of polymer backbones within the gelled adhesive. The network’s self-assembly after gelation was envisioned to afford control over swelling and reinforce its strength. Bombyx mori silk fibroin was selected as the backbone of the adhesive network because it can be processed into an aqueous solution yet later be rendered insoluble in water through the assembly of its hydrophobic protein core. Distinct from a previous approach to functionalize silk directly with catechol groups, this work investigated in situ generation of catechol on silk fibroin by enzymatically modifying phenolic side chains, where it was found that this enzymatic approach led to conjugates with higher degrees of catechol functionalization and aqueous solubility. Silk fibroin was functionalized with tyramine to enrich the protein’s phenolic side chains, which were subsequently oxidized into catechol groups using mushroom tyrosinase (MT). The gelation of the silk conjugates with MT was monitored by rheology, and the gels exhibited low water uptake. Phenolic enrichment increased the rate of chemical cross-linking leading to gelation but did not interrupt assembly of silk’s secondary structures. Adhesion of the tyramine–silk conjugates to porcine intestine was found to be superior to fibrin sealant, and induction of β sheet secondary structures was found to further enhance adhesive strength through a second mode of cross-linking. Neither the chemical functionalization nor phenol oxidation affected the ability of intestinal epithelial cells (Caco-2) to attach and proliferate. Phenolic functionalization and oxidative cross-linking of silk fibroin was found to afford a new route to water-soluble, catechol-functionalized polymers, which were found to display excellent adhesion to mucosal tissue and whose secondary structure provides an additional mode to control strength and swelling of adhesive gels.
Silk fibroin is a semicrystalline protein used as a renewable polymer source and as a biomaterial platform, but existing methods to synthetically modify fibroin suffer from low efficiencies that can limit the protein’s utility. This work reports on a mild synthesis that results in a 2-fold increase in carboxylation through the disruption of noncovalent interactions during the reaction. Importantly, silk fibroin maintains its ability to form β-sheets that are critical for tailoring mechanical and degradation properties, as well as for rendering solid constructs (e.g., films and scaffolds) insoluble in water. Increasing carboxyl functionalization affords control over protein charge, which permits tailoring the loading and release of small molecules using electrostatic interactions. Disruption of noncovalent interactions during aqueous carbodiimide coupling also significantly enhances conjugation efficiency of molecules containing primary amine groups, thus enabling high degrees of functionalization with biological molecules, such as proteins and peptides, for biomaterial applications.
Silk fibroin films were modified with zwitterionic and hydrophilic brush-like polymers via surface-initiated ATRP, resulting in surfaces that reduced protein adsorption and cell attachment.
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