Smart pH-Responsive Antimicrobial Hydrogel Scaffolds
Prepared by Additive Manufacturing
Posted on 2018-09-13 - 00:00
We
report on the fabrication of 3D printed pH-responsive and antimicrobial
hydrogels with a micrometer-scale resolution achieved by stereolithography
(SLA) 3D printing. The preparation of the hydrogels was optimized
by selecting the most appropriate difunctional polyethylene glycol
dimethacrylates (testing cross-linking agents with chain lengths ranging
from 2 up to 14 units ethylene glycol) and introducing acrylic acid
(AA) as a monofunctional monomer. As a result of the incorporation
of AA, the hydrogels described are able to reversibly swell and shrink
upon environmental changes on the pH, and the swelling extent is directly
related to the amount of AA and can be thus finely tuned. More interestingly,
upon optimization of the UV penetration depth employing a photoabsorber
(Sudan I), a reliable procedure for the fabrication of 3D objects
with a high model accuracy is shown. Finally, the antimicrobial properties
of all of the hydrogels were demonstrated using Staphylococcus
aureus as a bacterial model. We found that even those hydrogels
with a low amount of AA monomeric units presented excellent antimicrobial
properties against S. aureus.