Abstract
Abstract
Constitutional dynamic networks (CDNs) attract interest as signal-triggered reconfigurable systems mimicking natural networks. The application of CDNs to control material properties is, however, a major challenge. Here we report on the design of a CDN consisting of four toehold-modified constituents, two of which act as bidentate units for chain-elongating, while the other two form a tetradentate structure acting as a crosslinking unit. Their hybridization yields a hydrogel of medium stiffness controlled by the balance between bidentate and tetradentate units. Stabilization of the tetradentate constituent by an auxiliary effector up-regulates the crosslinking unit, yielding a high-stiffness hydrogel. Conversely, stabilization of one of the bidentate constituents by an orthogonal effector enriches the chain-elongation units leading to a low-stiffness hydrogel. Using appropriate counter effectors, the hydrogels are reversibly switched across low-, medium- and high-stiffness states. The hydrogels are used to develop self-healing and controlled drug-release matrices and functional materials for operating biocatalytic cascades.
Funder
Israel Science Foundation Minerva Center for Biohybrid Complex Systems
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry
Cited by
88 articles.
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