Abstract

Described herein is the design of a cell-adherent and degradable hydrogel. Our goal was to create a self-assembling, backbone ester-containing analogue of the cell adhesion motif, arginine–glycine–aspartic acid (RGD). Two depsipeptides containing Fmoc (N-(fluorenyl)-9-methoxycarbonyl), Fmoc-FR-Glc-D, and Fmoc-F-Glc-RGD (where “Glc” is glycolic acid) were designed based on the results of integrin-binding affinity and cell interaction analyses. Two candidate molecules were synthesized, and their gelation characteristics, degradation profiles, and ability to promote cell attachment were analyzed. We found that ester substitution within the RGD sequence significantly decreases the integrin-binding affinity and subsequent cell attachment, but when the ester moiety flanks the bioactive sequence, the molecule can maintain its integrin-binding function while permitting nonenzymatic hydrolytic degradation. A self-assembled Fmoc-F-Glc-RGD hydrogel showed steady, linear degradation over 60 days, and when mixed with Fmoc-diphenylalanine (Fmoc-FF) for improved mechanical stiffness, the depsipeptide gel exhibited improved cell attachment and viability. Though the currently designed depsipeptide has several inherent limitations, our results indicate the potential of depsipeptides as the basis for biologically functional and degradable self-assembling hydrogel materials.

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