Synthetic matrix metalloproteinase-sensitive hydrogels for the conduction of tissue regeneration: Engineering cell-invasion characteristics
University of Bern · University of Zurich · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Synthetic hydrogels have been molecularly engineered to mimic the invasive characteristics of native provisional extracellular matrices: a combination of integrin-binding sites and substrates for matrix metalloproteinases (MMP) was required to render the networks degradable and invasive by cells via cell-secreted MMPs. Degradation of gels was engineered starting from a characterization of the degradation kinetics (k(cat) and K(m)) of synthetic MMP substrates in the soluble form and after crosslinking into a 3D hydrogel network. Primary human fibroblasts were demonstrated to proteolytically invade these networks, a process that depended on MMP substrate activity, adhesion ligand concentration, and network…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 12.26
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 42
Authors
7- MPMatthias P. LütolfCorresponding
University of Bern, University of Zurich, Institute for Biomedical Engineering, Florida Atlantic University
- JLJanelle L. Lauer‐Fields
University of Bern, University of Zurich, Institute for Biomedical Engineering, Florida Atlantic University
- HGHugo G. Schmoekel
University of Bern, University of Zurich, Institute for Biomedical Engineering, Florida Atlantic University
- ATAndrew T. Metters
University of Bern, University of Zurich, Institute for Biomedical Engineering, Florida Atlantic University
- FEFranz E. Weber
University of Bern, University of Zurich, Institute for Biomedical Engineering, Florida Atlantic University
Topics & keywords
- Self-healing hydrogels
- Matrix metalloproteinase
- Extracellular matrix
- Tissue engineering
- Regeneration (biology)
- Cell biology
- Chemistry
- Cell adhesion