Abstract

The natural blood protein fibrinogen is a highly potent precursor for the production of various biomaterials due to its supreme biocompatibility and cell interaction. To gain actual materials from fibrinogen, the protein needs to undergo fibrillogenesis, which is mostly triggered via enzymatic processing to fibrin, electrospinning, or drying processes. All of those techniques, however, strongly limit the available structures or the applicability of the material. To overcome the current issues of fibrin(ogen) as material, we herein present a highly feasible, quick, and inexpensive technique for self-assembly of fibrinogen in solution into defined, nanofibrous three-dimensional (3D) patterns. Upon interaction with specific anions in controlled environments, stable and flexible hydrogel-like structures are formed without any further processing. Moreover, the material can be converted into highly porous and elastic aerogels by lyophilization. Both of these material classes have never been described before from native fibrinogen. The observed phenomenon also represents the first enzyme-free process of fibrillogenesis from fibrinogen with significant yield in solution. The produced hydrogels and aerogels were investigated via electron microscopy, IR spectroscopy, and fluorescence spectroscopy, which also confirms the native state of the protein. Additionally, their mechanical properties were compared with actual fibrin and unstructured fibrinogen. The structural features show a striking analogy to actual fibrin, both as hydro- and aerogel. This renders the new material a highly promising alternative for fibrin in biomaterial applications. A much faster initiation of fiber formation, exclusion of possible thrombin residuals, and low-cost reagents are great advantages.

Highlights

  • Biological materials exhibit enormous potential in manifold fields due to their unique and outstanding properties

  • We describe a feasible, quick, and lowcost approach, which enables manufacturing of both nanofibrous hydrogels and aerogels from fibrinogen with very high structural and molecular resemblance of actual fibrin

  • For each combined Dynamic light scattering (DLS)/SLS measurement, a fibrinogen solution with a concentration of 0.2 g/L was freshly prepared by dissolving the protein in 20 °C warm DI water for 10 min

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Biological materials exhibit enormous potential in manifold fields due to their unique and outstanding properties. One approach to create fibrinogen fibers in solution is described by Wei et al Here, fibrillogenesis is induced by adding ethanol to dissolved fibrinogen This process only yields extremely low amounts of fibers because of its strict limitations concerning the fibrinogen concentration. We describe a feasible, quick, and lowcost approach, which enables manufacturing of both nanofibrous hydrogels and aerogels from fibrinogen with very high structural and molecular resemblance of actual fibrin. In this novel process, gelation of fibrinogen is induced by specific anions at very distinct reaction conditions. We outline the prerequisites and influencing parameters of the gelation and discuss the structural and molecular comparison to fibrin

EXPERIMENTAL SECTION
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
CONCLUSIONS
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