A natural polymer-based hydrogel with shape controllability and high toughness and its application to efficient osteochondral regeneration†
Abstract
Hydrogels prepared from sustainable natural polymers have broad prospects in the biological field. However, their poor mechanical properties and challenges in achieving shape control have limited their application. Herein, a novel preforming dual-effect post-enhancing method is proposed to address these issues. The method utilizes the hydrogen bonding of agar to obtain a shape-controllable preformed hydrogel at low polymer concentrations using casting, injection, or 3D printing techniques. Subsequently, the preformed hydrogel was subjected to a permeation process to form a post-enhanced multi-network (PEMN) hydrogel with hierarchical chain entanglements to ensure its high toughness, which exhibits tensile and compressive strengths of up to 0.51 MPa and 1.26 MPa with solely physically crosslinking networks. The excellent biocompatibility of the PEMN hydrogel prepared without the need for additional initiator agents under mild conditions was confirmed by both in vitro and in vivo experiments. Furthermore, the adaptability for irregular defects, suitable toughness, adhesive properties, and degradability of PEMN hydrogels are beneficial to provide mechanical support, induce endogenous cell mineralization, and accelerate the regeneration of cartilage and subchondral bone with more than 40% bone regeneration in 12 weeks. Our work has provided a novel solution to simultaneously achieve shape controllability and high toughness based on natural polymers among the already well-explored strategies for osteochondral regeneration.