Litcius/Paper detail

Multicomponent DNA Polymerization Motor Gels

Ruohong Shi, Joshua Fern, Weinan Xu, Sisi Jia, Qi Huang, Gayatri Pahapale, Rebecca Schulman, David H. Gracias

2020Small25 citationsDOI

Abstract

Hydrogels with the ability to change shape in response to biochemical stimuli are important for biosensing, smart medicine, drug delivery, and soft robotics. Here, a family of multicomponent DNA polymerization motor gels with different polymer backbones is created, including acrylamide-co-bis-acrylamide (Am-BIS), poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylate (PEGDA), and gelatin-methacryloyl (GelMA) that swell extensively in response to specific DNA sequences. A common mechanism, a polymerization motor that induces swelling is driven by a cascade of DNA hairpin insertions into hydrogel crosslinks. These multicomponent hydrogels can be photopatterned into distinct shapes, have a broad range of mechanical properties, including tunable shear moduli between 297 and 3888 Pa and enhanced biocompatibility. Human cells adhere to the GelMA-DNA gels and remain viable during ≈70% volumetric swelling of the gel scaffold induced by DNA sequences. The results demonstrate the generality of sequential DNA hairpin insertion as a mechanism for inducing shape change in multicomponent hydrogels, suggesting widespread applicability of polymerization motor gels in biomaterials science and engineering.

Topics & Concepts

Self-healing hydrogelsPolymerizationMaterials scienceGelatinPolymerBiocompatibilitySwellingEthylene glycolAcrylamideDrug deliveryPolymer chemistryBiophysicsNanotechnologyChemistryCopolymerOrganic chemistryComposite materialMetallurgyBiologyHydrogels: synthesis, properties, applicationsMicro and Nano RoboticsAdvanced Materials and Mechanics