Bone-Adhesive Hydrogel for Effective Inhibition of <i>M. tuberculosis</i> and Osteoblast Regeneration
Sivaraj Mehnath, Marimuthu Sathish Kumar, Chitra Karuppannan, Murugaraj Jeyaraj
Abstract
Currently, bone tuberculosis (TB) treatment largely involves lifelong drug prescriptions and surgical intervention, resulting in poor quality of life for patients. Therefore, the fabrication of injectable scaffolds to form a solid framework around the defective bone region is gaining importance over the extensive use of antimicrobial inhibitors. Herein, we synthesized a novel bone-adhesive and thermoresponsive hydrogel via conjugation of poly( N -isopropylacrylamide- co -glycidyl methacrylate) (PNIPAM- co -GMA) and cysteine (CYS). Thiolation of the polymer enables chemical cross-linking with the bone glycoprotein, enhancing bone adhesion and permitting control of scaffold retention time. The PNIPAM- co -GMA-CYS hydrogel shows higher cross-linking behavior at 37 °C, forms a strong gel in 260 s, and has 151 kPa adhesion strength on cortical bone. The lead compounds 5-methyl-5H-[1,2,4]triazino[5,6- b ]indole-3-thiol (MTIT) and N - tert -butyl-4-methyl-6-(5-methyl-5H-[1,2,4]triazino[5,6- b ]indol-3-ylthio)pyrimidin-2-amine (TMTIPA) were identified by a high-throughput screening method. Effective MTIT and TMTIPA are encapsulated in bone-adhesive hydrogel separately, and both have a high release rate above >70% in 180 h. The MTIT- and TMTIPA-loaded PNIPAM- co -GMA-CYS showed an excellent bactericidal effect, reducing the relative intracellular bacterial survival in macrophages. Furthermore, the as-synthesized hydrogel has outstanding mechanical and biocompatibility properties to become a bone-replacing material and provide support to promote bone repair. This work presents a novel bone-adhesive PNIPAM- co -GMA-CYS for the sustained release of lead compounds toward promising alternative bone TB treatment.