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Linking the foreign body response and protein adsorption to PEG-based hydrogels using proteomics.

Biomaterials.. 2014-12; 
MD Swartzlander, CA Barnes, AK Blakney, JL Kaar, T R Kyriakides, S J Bryant. Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309, USA.
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Abstract

Poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) hydrogels with their highly tunable properties are promising implantable materials, but as with all non-biological materials, they elicit a foreign body response (FBR). Recent studies, however, have shown that incorporating the oligopeptide RGD into PEG hydrogels reduces the FBR. To better understand the mechanisms involved and the role of RGD in mediating the FBR, PEG, PEG-RGD and PEG-RDG hydrogels were investigated. After a 28-day subcutaneous implantation in mice, a thinner and less dense fibrous capsule formed around PEG-RGD hydrogels, while PEG and PEG-RDG hydrogels exhibited stronger, but similar FBRs. Protein adsorption to the hydrogels, which is considered the first step in t... More

Keywords

Poly(ethylene glycol); Macrophage; Hydrogel; Foreign body response; Protein adsorption; Mass spectrometry