Synthesis and characterization of self-crosslinked carboxymethyl chitosan-based hydrogel and its composites with gelatin and PEG-GO for drug delivery applications

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Title
Synthesis and characterization of self-crosslinked carboxymethyl chitosan-based hydrogel and its composites with gelatin and PEG-GO for drug delivery applications
Author(s)
K Shahzad; M A Raza; A Hussain; Kyong-Cheol Ko; H J Jeong; K K Seralathan; S S Han; S H Park
Bibliographic Citation
International Journal of Biological Macromolecules, vol. 308, pp. 142256-142256
Publication Year
2025
Abstract
Hydrogels are widely employed in drug delivery, gene delivery, tissue engineering, and wound healing applications. However, many organic crosslinkers used in hydrogel fabrication exhibit poor water solubility, low biodegradation rates, and toxicity, limiting their biomedical utility. In this study, we developed a simple, cost-effective, and rapid method for synthesizing self-crosslinked carboxymethyl chitosan-based hydrogel (CMCH HG) using N-(3-Dimethylaminopropyl)-N-ethylcarbodiimide (EDC) and N-Hydroxysuccinimide (NHS) chemistry instead of toxic organic crosslinkers. To enhance physicochemical properties, we prepared composites of self-crosslinked hydrogel with gelatin (CMCH/GL HG) and 6-arm polyethylene glycol amine-functionalized graphene oxide (CMCH/GL/PEG-GO HG). The fabrication and physicochemical characteristics of the self-crosslinked hydrogel and its composites were verified through analytical and spectroscopic techniques. The in-vitro drug release study using berberine chloride demonstrated that CMCH/GL/PEG-GO HG released only 30 % of the drug in the first 12 h and a total of 39 % after 96 h. Due to controlled drug release, excellent antioxidant activities, anticancer properties, biodegradability, and minimal toxicity, the composite of self-crosslinked carboxymethyl chitosan hydrogel with gelatin and graphene oxide represents a promising candidate as a drug carrier at tumor sites to minimize off-target effects of chemotherapy.
Keyword
Carboxymethyl chitosanGelatinPEG-graphene oxideHydrogelsDrug delivery applications
ISSN
0141-8130
Publisher
Elsevier
Full Text Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2025.142256
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
Ochang Branch Institute > Division of National Bio-Infrastructure > Korea Preclinical Evaluation Center > 1. Journal Articles
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