Journal article

Tuning the mechanical and morphological properties of self-assembled peptide hydrogels via control over the gelation mechanism through regulation of ionic strength and the rate of pH change

R Li, CC Horgan, B Long, AL Rodriguez, L Mather, CJ Barrow, DR Nisbet, RJ Williams

Rsc Advances | Published : 2015

Abstract

Hydrogels formed by the self-assembly of peptides are promising biomaterials. The bioactive and biocompatible molecule Fmoc-FRGDF has been shown to be an efficient hydrogelator via a π-β self-assembly mechanism. Herein, we show that the mechanical properties and morphology of Fmoc-FRGDF hydrogels can be effectively and easily manipulated by tuning both the final ionic strength and the rate of pH change. The increase of ionic strength, and consequent increase in rate of gelation and stiffness, does not interfere with the underlying π-β assembly of this Fmoc-protected peptide. However, by tuning the changing rate of the system's pH through the use of glucono-δ-lactone to form a hydrogel, as op..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

This work was funded by an Australian Research Council Discovery Project (DP130103131). DRN was supported by an NHMRC Career Development Fellowship (APP1050684). RJW was supported by an Alfred Deakin Research Fellowship. The authors wish to thank Motilal Mathesh Shanmugam for assistance with AFM, Tao Zhang, and Ping'an Song for assistance with rheometry, and San Seint Seint Aye for assistance with the synthesis of Fmoc-FRGDF.