Abstract

Injectable hydrogels from biocompatible materials are in demand for tissue engineering and drug delivery systems. Here, we produce hydrogels from mere cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) by salt-induced charge screening. The injectability of CNC hydrogels was assessed by a combination of shear and capillary rheology, revealing that CNC hydrogels are conveyed via plug flow in capillaries allowing injection with minimal impact on mechanical properties. The potential of CNC hydrogels as drug carriers was elaborated by the in vitro release of the model protein bovine serum albumin (BSA), poorly water soluble tetracycline (TC), and readily soluble doxorubicin (DOX) into physiological saline and simulated gastric juice. For TC, a burst release was observed within 2 days, whereas BSA and DOX both showed a sustained release for 2 weeks. Only DOX was released fully from the hydrogels. The different release patterns were attributed to drug size, solubility, and specific drug-CNC interactions. The biocompatibility of CNC hydrogels and maintained bioactivity of released DOX were confirmed in a HeLa cell assay. The drug release was modulated by the incorporation of sucrose or xanthan gum in CNC hydrogels, whereas altering CNC concentration showed minor effects. The release into simulated gastric juice at pH 2 ceased for BSA due to charge inversion and electrostatic complexation, but not for smaller TC. Thus, CNC hydrogels may act as pH-responsive delivery systems that preserve drugs under gastric conditions followed by pH-triggered release in the duodenum.

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