Elastomeric, fully degradable and biocompatible biomaterials are rare, with current options presenting significant limitations in terms of ease of functionalization and tunable mechanical and degradation properties. We report a new method for covalently crosslinking tyrosine residues in silk proteins, via horseradish peroxidase and hydrogen peroxide, to generate highly elastic hydrogels with tunable properties. The tunable mechanical properties, gelation kinetics and swelling properties of these new protein polymers, in addition to their ability to withstand shear strains on the order of 100%, compressive strains greater than 70% and display stiffness between 200 – 10,000 Pa, covering a significant portion of the properties of native soft tissues. Molecular weight and solvent composition allowed control of material mechanical properties over several orders of magnitude while maintaining high resilience and resistance to fatigue. Encapsulation of human bone marrow derived mesenchymal stem cells (hMSC) showed long term survival and exhibited cell-matrix interactions reflective of both silk concentration and gelation conditions. Further biocompatibility of these materials were demonstrated with in vivo evaluation. These new protein-based elastomeric and degradable hydrogels represent an exciting new biomaterials option, with a unique combination of properties, for tissue engineering and regenerative medicine.
We present a silk biomaterial platform
with highly tunable mechanical
and degradation properties for engineering and regeneration of soft
tissues such as, skin, adipose, and neural tissue, with elasticity
properties in the kilopascal range. Lyophilized silk sponges were
prepared under different process conditions and the effect of silk
molecular weight, concentration and crystallinity on 3D scaffold formation,
structural integrity, morphology, mechanical and degradation properties,
and cell interactions in vitro and in vivo were studied. Tuning the
molecular weight distribution (via degumming time) of silk allowed
the formation of stable, highly porous, 3D scaffolds that held form
with silk concentrations as low as 0.5% wt/v. Mechanical properties
were a function of silk concentration and scaffold degradation was
driven by beta-sheet content. Lyophilized silk sponges supported the
adhesion of mesenchymal stem cells throughout 3D scaffolds, cell proliferation
in vitro, and cell infiltration and scaffold remodeling when implanted
subcutaneously in vivo.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.