Synthesis of an erodible biomimetic hydrogel for drug delivery using native chemical ligation


Autoria(s): Fernandes, Wren Austin
Data(s)

2012

Resumo

Hydrogels are hydrophilic, three dimensional polymers that imbibe large quantities of water while remaining insoluble in aqueous solutions due to chemical or physical cross-linking. The polymers swell in water or biological fluids, immobilizing the bioactive agent, leading to drug release in a well-defined specific manner. Thus the hydrogels’ elastic properties, swellability and biocompatibility make them excellent formulations for drug delivery. Currently, many drug potencies and therapeutic effects are limited or otherwise reduced because of the partial degradation that occurs before the administered drug reaches the desired site of action. On the other hand, sustained release medications release drugs continually, rather than providing relief of symptoms and protection solely when necessary. In fact, it would be much better if drugs could be administered in a manner that precisely matches physiological needs at desired times and at the desired site (site specific targeting). There is therefore an unmet need to develop controlled drug delivery systems especially for delivery of peptide and protein bound drugs. The purpose of this project is to produce hydrogels for structural drug delivery and time-dependent sustained release of drugs (bioactive agents). We use an innovative polymerisation strategy based on native chemical ligation (NCL) to covalently cross-link polymers to form hydrogels. When mixed in aqueous solution, four armed (polyethylene glycol) amine (PEG-4A) end functionalised with thioester and four branched Nterminal cysteine peptide dendrimers spontaneously conjugated to produce biomimetic hydrogels. These hydrogels showed superior resistance to shear stress compared to an equivalent PEG macromonomer system and were shown to be proteolytically degradable with concomitant release of a model payload molecule. This is the first report of a peptide dendrimers/PEG macromonomer approach to hydrogel production and opens up the prospect of facile hydrogel synthesis together with tailored payload release.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/59502/

Publicador

Queensland University of Technology

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/59502/1/Wren_Fernandes_Thesis.pdf

Fernandes, Wren Austin (2012) Synthesis of an erodible biomimetic hydrogel for drug delivery using native chemical ligation. Masters by Research thesis, Queensland University of Technology.

Fonte

Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation

Palavras-Chave #hydrogel, biomimetic, polyethylene glycol, native chemical ligation, controlled drug delivery
Tipo

Thesis