» Articles » PMID: 10030602

Tyrosine-PEG-derived Poly(ether Carbonate)s As New Biomaterials. Part I: Synthesis and Evaluation

Overview
Journal Biomaterials
Date 1999 Feb 25
PMID 10030602
Citations 21
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Tyrosine PEG-derived poly(ether carbonate)s were prepared by condensation copolymerization with phosgene. The resulting polymers were random copolymers with weight average molecular weights from 40 000 to 200 000 dalton. Chemical structure and purity were confirmed by NMR and FTIR spectral analysis. General structure property correlations were established. The glass transition temperature decreased with increasing PEG content and increasing pendent chain length. When higher molecular weight PEG blocks were used, the glass transition temperature increased relative to identical polymers having shorter PEG blocks. The tensile modulus increased with decreasing PEG content, decreasing pendent chain length, and when longer PEG blocks were used. Water uptake and the rate of backbone degradation increased with increasing PEG content. Microspheres could be prepared by solvent evaporation techniques from copolymers with low PEG content. Release rate of pNA and FITC-dextran from the microspheres increased with increasing PEG content. While tyrosine-derived polycarbonates were excellent substrates for cell attachment and growth, the presence of only 5 mol% of PEG1000 led to low or no cell attachment in short-term cell culture with both rat lung fibroblasts and osteoblasts. The polymers were non-cytotoxic.

Citing Articles

Overcoming barriers confronting application of protein therapeutics in bone fracture healing.

Czech T, Oyewumi M Drug Deliv Transl Res. 2020; 11(3):842-865.

PMID: 32783153 DOI: 10.1007/s13346-020-00829-x.


A multilayered scaffold for regeneration of smooth muscle and connective tissue layers.

Garrison C, Singh-Varma A, Pastino A, Steele J, Kohn J, Murthy N J Biomed Mater Res A. 2020; 109(5):733-744.

PMID: 32654327 PMC: 7855544. DOI: 10.1002/jbm.a.37058.


A step toward engineering thick tissues: Distributing microfibers within 3D printed frames.

Molde J, Steele J, Pastino A, Mahat A, Murthy N, Kohn J J Biomed Mater Res A. 2019; 108(3):581-591.

PMID: 31721423 PMC: 7078963. DOI: 10.1002/jbm.a.36838.


Temperature-Activated PEG Surface Segregation Controls the Protein Repellency of Polymers.

Murthy N, Wang W, Sommerfeld S, Vaknin D, Kohn J Langmuir. 2019; 35(30):9769-9776.

PMID: 31257890 PMC: 6686177. DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.9b00702.


Effects of Terminal Sterilization on PEG-Based Bioresorbable Polymers Used in Biomedical Applications.

Bhatnagar D, Dube K, Damodaran V, Subramanian G, Aston K, Halperin F Macromol Mater Eng. 2017; 301(10):1211-1224.

PMID: 28280451 PMC: 5340269. DOI: 10.1002/mame.201600133.