Abstract
Herein, we highlight a novel finding that ferritin can play a crucial role in the “self-healing lifetime” of soft phenolic materials. Ferritin interacts with a catechol-functionalized polymer to form a self-healable and adhesive hydrogel bidirectionally by providing and retrieving Fe3+. As a result of its unique role as a nanoshuttle to store and release iron, ferritin significantly increases the self-healing lifetime of the hydrogel compared with that afforded by catechol-Fe3+ coordination through direct Fe3+ addition without ferritin. Ferritin also induces stable oxidative coupling between catechol moieties following metal coordination, which contributes to double cross-linking networks of catechol-catechol adducts and catechol-Fe3+ coordination. Thus, ferritin-mediated cross-linking can provide phenolic hydrogels with the advantages of hydrogels prepared by both metal coordination and oxidative coupling, thereby overcoming the limitations of the current cross-linking methods of phenolic hydrogels and broadening their versatility in biomedical applications.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 5934-5942 |
| Number of pages | 9 |
| Journal | Nano Letters |
| Volume | 23 |
| Issue number | 13 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 12 Jul 2023 |
Keywords
- catechol-functionalized hydrogel
- ferritin
- iron shuttling
- self-healing