An approach to the surface modification of poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) to render it adhesive to poly(amidoamine) (PAA) hydrogels, thus allowing fabrication of entirely biodegradable and biomimetic multilayered composite biomaterials with the PLGA film playing the role of reinforcing material, for instance imparting resistance to stitching, is N2/H2 plasma treatment of PLGA surfaces aimed at introducing amine groups and covalently immobilizing PAAs. Grafting of linear PAAs, demonstrated by XPS analysis, is reported first. Coherent PAA/PLGA composite hydrogels with embedded PLGA films can be obtained likewise. They are soft, elastic and resistant to osmotic shock. In contrast, hydrogels prepared from untreated PLGA films delaminate on swelling. Accessible hybrid PAA/PLGA materials may expand PLGA’s biomedical applications.

Covalent immobilization of bioactive poly(amidoamine)s onto plasma-functionalized PLGA surfaces / S. Zanini, C. Riccardi, A. Natalello, G. Cappelletti, D. Cartelli, F. Fenili, A. Manfredi, E. Ranucci. - In: MATERIALS RESEARCH EXPRESS. - ISSN 2053-1591. - 1:3(2014), pp. 035001.-035001.1.

Covalent immobilization of bioactive poly(amidoamine)s onto plasma-functionalized PLGA surfaces

G. Cappelletti;D. Cartelli;F. Fenili;A. Manfredi
Penultimo
;
E. Ranucci
Ultimo
2014

Abstract

An approach to the surface modification of poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) to render it adhesive to poly(amidoamine) (PAA) hydrogels, thus allowing fabrication of entirely biodegradable and biomimetic multilayered composite biomaterials with the PLGA film playing the role of reinforcing material, for instance imparting resistance to stitching, is N2/H2 plasma treatment of PLGA surfaces aimed at introducing amine groups and covalently immobilizing PAAs. Grafting of linear PAAs, demonstrated by XPS analysis, is reported first. Coherent PAA/PLGA composite hydrogels with embedded PLGA films can be obtained likewise. They are soft, elastic and resistant to osmotic shock. In contrast, hydrogels prepared from untreated PLGA films delaminate on swelling. Accessible hybrid PAA/PLGA materials may expand PLGA’s biomedical applications.
No
English
biodegradable; hydrogels; biomimetic; cell culturing; poly(lactic-coglycolic acid); polyamidoamines; plasma treatments
Settore CHIM/04 - Chimica Industriale
Settore BIO/06 - Anatomia Comparata e Citologia
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Ricerca di base
Pubblicazione scientifica
2014
Institute of physics
1
3
035001
1
18
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
crossref
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Covalent immobilization of bioactive poly(amidoamine)s onto plasma-functionalized PLGA surfaces / S. Zanini, C. Riccardi, A. Natalello, G. Cappelletti, D. Cartelli, F. Fenili, A. Manfredi, E. Ranucci. - In: MATERIALS RESEARCH EXPRESS. - ISSN 2053-1591. - 1:3(2014), pp. 035001.-035001.1.
reserved
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
8
262
Article (author)
no
S. Zanini, C. Riccardi, A. Natalello, G. Cappelletti, D. Cartelli, F. Fenili, A. Manfredi, E. Ranucci
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/247303
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