Triple-helical collagen hydrogels via covalent aromatic functionalization with 1,3-Phenylenediacetic acid
Giuseppe Tronci, Amanda Doyle, Stephen J. Russell, David J. Wood

TL;DR
This study introduces covalently aromatic functionalized collagen hydrogels with preserved triple helix structure, enhanced mechanical properties, and mineralization potential, offering promising applications in mineralized tissue engineering.
Contribution
It presents a novel covalent functionalization method of collagen with 1,3-Phenylenediacetic acid, maintaining triple helix conformation and improving material properties for tissue engineering.
Findings
Preserved collagen triple helix confirmed by ATR-FTIR and WAXS.
Enhanced thermo-mechanical properties compared to EDC-crosslinked collagen.
Successful mineralization with calcium-phosphate deposition in hydrogels.
Abstract
Chemical crosslinking of collagen is a general strategy to reproduce macroscale tissue properties in physiological environment. However, simultaneous control of protein conformation, material properties and biofunctionality is highly challenging with current synthetic strategies. Consequently, the potentially-diverse clinical applications of collagen-based biomaterials cannot be fully realised. In order to establish defined biomacromolecular systems for mineralised tissue applications, type I collagen was functionalised with 1,3-Phenylenediacetic acid (Ph) and investigated at the molecular, macroscopic and functional levels. Preserved triple helix conformation was observed in obtained covalent networks via ATR-FTIR and WAXS, while network crosslinking degree could be adjusted based on specific reaction conditions. Decreased swelling ratio and increased thermo-mechanical properties were…
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