Solid-Phase Synthesis and Kinetic Characterization of Fluorogenic Enzyme-Degradable Hydrogel Cross-linkers
- 8 March 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biomacromolecules
- Vol. 7 (4) , 1011-1016
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bm051001s
Abstract
Of critical importance in drug delivery and tissue engineering applications is the degradabilty of implanted polymeric materials. The use of peptide-derived cross-linkers in hydrogel design is a valuable approach by which polymeric carriers can be endowed with enzymatic degradability in a predictable, “programmable” fashion. The solid-phase synthesis strategy described herein allows for an expeditious, flexible synthesis of bis-acrylamide-derivatized peptides with complex modifications, as exemplified by the incorporation of fluorophore and quencher moieties into a matrix metalloprotease (MMP)-degradable cross-linker. The crude synthetic product was obtained in high yield and purity and purified by standard methods; it was then used directly for polymerization without the need for tedious and often nonchemoselective solution-phase modifications. Functional appendages incorporated for detection provided a direct, quantitative link between enzymatic activity and hydrogel degradation using routine methods for identification of optimal enzyme-specific degradability.Keywords
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