We report on self-healing, pH-responsive hydrogels that are entirely protein-based. The protein is a denovo designed recombinant triblock polypeptide of 66 kg/mol consisting of a silk-like middle block (GAGAGAGH)48, flanked by two long collagen-inspired hydrophilic random coil side blocks. The pH-dependent charge on the histidines in the silk block controls folding and stacking of the silk block. At low pH the protein exists as monomers, but above pH 6 it readily self-assembles into long fibers. At higher concentrations the fibers form self-healing physical gels. Optimal gel strength and self-healing are found at a pH of around 7. The modulus of a 2 wt % gel at pH 7 is G' = 1700 Pa. Being protein-based, and amenable to further sequence engineering, we expect that these proteins are promising scaffold materials to be developed for a broad range of biomedical applications.
Thiol-maleimide
and thiol-vinylsulfone cross-linked hydrogels are
widely used systems in 3D culture models, in spite of presenting uncomfortable
reaction kinetics for cell encapsulation: too fast (seconds for thiol-maleimide)
or too slow (minutes-hours for thiol-vinylsulfone). Here, we introduce
the thiol-methylsulfone reaction as alternative cross-linking chemistry
for cell encapsulation, particularized for PEG-hydrogels. The thiol-methylsulfone
reaction occurs at high conversion and at intermediate reaction speed
(seconds-minutes) under physiological pH range. These properties allow
easy mixing of hydrogel precursors and cells to render homogeneous
cell-laden gels at comfortable experimental time scales. The resulting
hydrogels are cytocompatible and show comparable hydrolytic stability
to thiol-vinylsulfone gels. They allow direct bioconjugation of thiol-derivatized
ligands and tunable degradation kinetics by cross-linking with degradable
peptide sequences. 3D cell culture of two cell types, fibroblasts
and human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs), is demonstrated.
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