Affiliation:
1. Department of Physics Emory University 400 Dowman Dr Atlanta GA 30322 USA
2. Department of Chemistry Emory University Atlanta GA 30322 USA
3. Department of Biomedical Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology and Emory University Atlanta GA 30322 USA
Abstract
AbstractSelf‐destructive polymers (SDPs) are defined as a class of smart polymers that autonomously degrade upon experiencing an external trigger, such as a chemical cue or optical excitation. Because SDPs release the materials trapped inside the network upon degradation, they have potential applications in drug delivery and analytical sensing. However, no known SDPs that respond to external mechanical forces have been reported, as it is fundamentally challenging to create mechano‐sensitivity in general and especially so for force levels below those required for classical force‐induced bond scission. To address this challenge, the development of force‐triggered SDPs composed of DNA crosslinked hydrogels doped with nucleases is described here. Externally applied piconewton forces selectively expose enzymatic cleavage sites within the DNA crosslinks, resulting in rapid polymer self‐degradation. The synthesis and the chemical and mechanical characterization of DNA crosslinked hydrogels, as well as the kinetics of force‐triggered hydrolysis, are described. As a proof‐of‐concept, force‐triggered and time‐dependent rheological changes in the polymer as well as encapsulated nanoparticle release are demonstrated. Finally, that the kinetics of self‐destruction are shown to be tuned as a function of nuclease concentration, incubation time, and thermodynamic stability of DNA crosslinkers.
Funder
National Institutes of Health
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science
Cited by
5 articles.
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