TY - JOUR
T1 - Copper-Free Azide-Alkyne Cycloaddition for Peptide Modification of Alginate Hydrogels
AU - Jain, Era
AU - Neal, Sydney
AU - Graf, Hannah
AU - Tan, Xiaohong
AU - Balasubramaniam, Rama
AU - Huebsch, Nathaniel
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2021/2/15
Y1 - 2021/2/15
N2 - Alginate, a biocompatible polymer naturally derived from algae, is widely used as a synthetic analogue of the extracellular matrix in tissue engineering. Integrin-binding peptide motifs, including RGD, a derivative of fibronectin, are typically grafted to the alginate polymer through carbodiimide reactions between peptide amines and alginate uronic acids. However, lack of chemo-selectivity of carbodiimide reactions can lead to side reactions that lower peptide bioactivity. To overcome these limitations, we developed an approach for copper-free, strain-promoted azide-alkyne cycloaddition (SPAAC)-mediated conjugation of azide-modified adhesive peptides (azido-cyclo-RGD, Az-cRGD) onto alginate. Successful conjugation of azide-reactive cyclooctynes onto alginates using a heterobifunctional crosslinker was confirmed by azido-coumarin fluorescent assay, NMR, and through click reactions with azide-modified fluorescent probes. Compared to cyclo-RGD peptides directly conjugated to alginate polymers with standard carbodiimide chemistry, Az-cyclo-RGD peptides exhibited higher bioactivity, as demonstrated by cell adhesion and proliferation assays. Finally, Az-cRGD peptides enhanced the effects of recombinant bone morphogenetic proteins on inducing osteogenesis of osteoblasts and bone marrow stromal stem cells in 3D alginate gels. SPAAC-mediated click approaches for peptide-alginate bioconjugation overcome the limitations of previous alginate bioconjugation approaches and potentially expand the range of ligands that can be grafted to alginate polymers for tissue engineering applications.
AB - Alginate, a biocompatible polymer naturally derived from algae, is widely used as a synthetic analogue of the extracellular matrix in tissue engineering. Integrin-binding peptide motifs, including RGD, a derivative of fibronectin, are typically grafted to the alginate polymer through carbodiimide reactions between peptide amines and alginate uronic acids. However, lack of chemo-selectivity of carbodiimide reactions can lead to side reactions that lower peptide bioactivity. To overcome these limitations, we developed an approach for copper-free, strain-promoted azide-alkyne cycloaddition (SPAAC)-mediated conjugation of azide-modified adhesive peptides (azido-cyclo-RGD, Az-cRGD) onto alginate. Successful conjugation of azide-reactive cyclooctynes onto alginates using a heterobifunctional crosslinker was confirmed by azido-coumarin fluorescent assay, NMR, and through click reactions with azide-modified fluorescent probes. Compared to cyclo-RGD peptides directly conjugated to alginate polymers with standard carbodiimide chemistry, Az-cyclo-RGD peptides exhibited higher bioactivity, as demonstrated by cell adhesion and proliferation assays. Finally, Az-cRGD peptides enhanced the effects of recombinant bone morphogenetic proteins on inducing osteogenesis of osteoblasts and bone marrow stromal stem cells in 3D alginate gels. SPAAC-mediated click approaches for peptide-alginate bioconjugation overcome the limitations of previous alginate bioconjugation approaches and potentially expand the range of ligands that can be grafted to alginate polymers for tissue engineering applications.
KW - alginate hydrogels
KW - bone marrow stromal cells
KW - click chemistry
KW - extracellular matrix (ECM)
KW - integrin
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85100612086
U2 - 10.1021/acsabm.0c00976
DO - 10.1021/acsabm.0c00976
M3 - Article
C2 - 35014476
AN - SCOPUS:85100612086
SN - 2576-6422
VL - 4
SP - 1229
EP - 1237
JO - ACS Applied Bio Materials
JF - ACS Applied Bio Materials
IS - 2
ER -