Hydrolytic (In)stability of Methacrylate Esters in Covalently Cross-Linked Hydrogels Based on Chondroitin Sulfate and Hyaluronic Acid Methacrylate

Publication date

2021-10-12

Authors

Schuurmans, C C LISNI 0000000493311341
Brouwer, Arwin JISNI 0000000389950741
Jong, Jacobus Adrianus WilhelmusISNI 000000049289635X
Boons, Geert-JanORCID 0000-0003-3111-5954ISNI 0000000120249047
Hennink, WimISNI 0000000390382745
Vermonden, TinaISNI 0000000357250265

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Advisors

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Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

Chondroitin sulfate (CS) and hyaluronic acid (HA) methacrylate (MA) hydrogels are under investigation for biomedical applications. Here, the hydrolytic (in)stability of the MA esters in these polysaccharides and hydrogels is investigated. Hydrogels made with glycidyl methacrylate-derivatized CS (CSGMA) or methacrylic anhydride (CSMA) degraded after 2-25 days in a cross-linking density-dependent manner (pH 7.4, 37 °C). HA methacrylate (HAMA) hydrogels were stable over 50 days under the same conditions. CS(G)MA hydrogel degradation rates increased with pH, due to hydroxide-driven ester hydrolysis. Desulfated chondroitin MA hydrogels also degrade, indicating that sulfate groups are not responsible for CS(G)MA's hydrolytic sensitivity (pH 7.0-8.0, 37 °C). This sensitivity is likely because CS(G)MA's N-acetyl-galactosamines do not form hydrogen bonds with adjacent glucuronic acid oxygens, whereas HAMA's N-acetyl-glucosamines do. This bond absence allows CS(G)MA higher chain flexibility and hydration and could increase ester hydrolysis sensitivity in CS(G)MA networks. This report helps in biodegradable hydrogel development based on endogenous polysaccharides for clinical applications.

Keywords

General Chemistry, General Chemical Engineering

Citation

Schuurmans, C C L, Brouwer, A J, Jong, J A W, Boons, G-J P H, Hennink, W E & Vermonden, T 2021, 'Hydrolytic (In)stability of Methacrylate Esters in Covalently Cross-Linked Hydrogels Based on Chondroitin Sulfate and Hyaluronic Acid Methacrylate', ACS Omega, vol. 6, no. 40, pp. 26302-26310. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.1c03395