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Electrically conductive injectable silk/PEDOT: PSS hydrogel for enhanced neural network formation

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posted on 2025-02-06, 10:51 authored by Rajiv Borah, Julia O'Sullivan, Meenakshi Suku, Dahnan Spurling, Daniel Diez Clarke, Valeria Nicolosi, Maeve A Caldwell, Michael G Monaghan

With no effective treatments for functional recovery after injury, spinal cord injury (SCI) remains one of the unresolved healthcare challenges. Human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) transplantation is a versatile patient-specific regenerative approach for functional recovery after SCI. Injectable electroconductive hydrogel (ECH) can further enhance the cell transplantation efficacy through a minimally invasive manner as well as recapitulate the native bioelectrical microenvironment of neural tissue. Given these considerations, we report a novel ECH prepared through self-assembly facilitated in situ gelation of natural silk fibroin (SF) derived from mulberry Bombyx mori silk and electrically conductive PEDOT:PSS. PEDOT:PSS was pre-stabilized to prevent the potential delamination of its hydrophilic PSS chain under aqueous environment using 3% (v/v) (3-glycidyloxypropyl)trimethoxysilane (GoPS) and 3% (w/v) poly(ethylene glycol)diglycidyl ether (PeGDE). The resultant ECH formulations are easily injectable with standard hand force with flow point below 100 Pa and good shear-thinning properties. The ECH formulations with unmodified and GoPS-modified PEDOT:PSS, that is, SF/PEDOT and SF/PEDOTGoP maintain comparable elastic modulus to spinal cord (~10-60 kPa) under physiological condition, indicating their flexibility. The GoPS-modified ECHs also display improved structural recoverability (~70%-90%) as compared to the unmodified versions of the ECHs (~30%-80%), as indicated by the three interval time thixotropy (3ITT) test. Additionally, these ECHs possess electrical conductivity in the range of ~0.2-1.2 S/m comparable to spinal cord (1-10 S/m), indicating their ability to mimic native bioelectrical environment. Approximately 80% or more cell survival was observed when hiPSC-derived cortical neurons and astrocytes were encapsulated within these ECHs. These ECHs support the maturation of cortical neurons when embedded for 7 days, fostering the development of a complex, interconnected network of long axonal processes and promoting synaptogenesis. These results underline the potential of silk ECHs in cell transplantation therapy for spinal cord regeneration.

Funding

Development of minimally invasive neuromodulatory electroconductive hydrogel in combination with physical stimuli for spinal cord regeneration

European Commission

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CRY Ireland for Michael Greene Cardiac Risk in the Yong (CRY) Summer Scholarship (CRYUG/2023/001)

'EPSRC and SFI Centre for Doctoral Training in Engineered Tissues for Discovery, Industry and Medicine

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

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Super-HEART: a fault-tolerant and highly efficient energy hub with embedded short-term energy storage for high availability electric power delivery

European Commission

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AMBER_Phase 2

Science Foundation Ireland

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Engineering of hierarchical porous structures based on novel 2D nanomaterials: towards the new generation of battery devices beyond Lithium

Science Foundation Ireland

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History

Data Availability Statement

The data that support the findings of this study can be obtained from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.

Comments

The original article is available at https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/

Published Citation

Borah R, et al. Electrically conductive injectable silk/PEDOT: PSS hydrogel for enhanced neural network formation. J Biomed Mater Res A. 2025;113(1):e37859.

Publication Date

24 December 2024

PubMed ID

39719872

Department/Unit

  • Amber (Advanced Material & Bioengineering Research) Centre

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons, Inc

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)