Combinatorial hydrogel library enables identification of materials that mitigate the foreign body response in primates

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2016-01-01
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Vegas, Arturo
Bratlie, Kaitlin
et al.
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Bratlie, Kaitlin
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Materials Science and Engineering
Materials engineers create new materials and improve existing materials. Everything is limited by the materials that are used to produce it. Materials engineers understand the relationship between the properties of a material and its internal structure — from the macro level down to the atomic level. The better the materials, the better the end result — it’s as simple as that.
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Materials Science and EngineeringChemical and Biological Engineering
Abstract

The foreign body response is an immune-mediated reaction that can lead to the failure of implanted medical devices and discomfort for the recipient16. There is a critical need for biomaterials that overcome this key challenge in the development of medical devices. Here we use a combinatorial approach for covalent chemical modification to generate a large library of variants of one of the most widely used hydrogel biomaterials, alginate. We evaluated the materials in vivo and identified three triazole-containing analogs that substantially reduce foreign body reactions in both rodents and, for at least 6 months, in non-human primates. The distribution of the triazole modification creates a unique hydrogel surface that inhibits recognition by macrophages and fibrous deposition. In addition to the utility of the compounds reported here, our approach may enable the discovery of other materials that mitigate the foreign body response.

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This is a manuscript of an article published as Vegas, Arturo J., Omid Veiseh, Joshua C. Doloff, Minglin Ma, Hok Hei Tam, Kaitlin Bratlie, Jie Li et al. "Combinatorial hydrogel library enables identification of materials that mitigate the foreign body response in primates." Nature Biotechnology 34, no. 3 (2016): 345, doi:10.1038%2Fnbt.3462. Posted with permission.

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Fri Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 2016
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