Hyaluronic acid as a versatile building block for the development of biofunctional hydrogels: In vitro models and preclinical innovations
Hyaluronic acid (HyA) is a non-sulphated linear polysaccharide found abundantly in the extracellular matrix, known for its biocompatibility and versatility in tissue engineering. Chemical modifications of HyA, including methacrylate, acrylate, click chemistry, norbornene, or host-guest chemistry, are necessary for the formation of stable hydrogels with tuneable biophysical characteristics. These modifications enable precise control over stiffness, swelling, degradation, and advanced functionalities such as shear-thinning, self-healing, and injectability. Functionalisation further enhances hydrogel bioactivity, enabling controlled cell adhesion, modulation of cell behaviour, hydrogel degradation, and release profiles, as well as inflammation modulation or bacterial growth inhibition. These are achieved by conjugating proteins, peptides, antibodies, or reactive chemical groups. HyA hydrogels find broad applications both in vitro and in vivo. In vitro, HyA-based hydrogels can support the development of models to understand fundamental processes in health and mechanisms behind disease progression, serving as highly tuneable extracellular matrix mimetics. As therapeutic interventions, injectable or implantable HyA-based hydrogels have been developed to repair a range of tissues, including cartilage, bone, muscle, and skin defects. However, issues remain to be addressed before widespread adoption of HyA-based hydrogels as clinical options. Future innovations for HyA hydrogels include its establishment as an enabling technology for the delivery of novel therapeutics, with a particular focus on immunomodulatory molecules, and the development of more dynamic, tissue-mimetic HyA-based hydrogels.
Funding
MedTrain+: Postdoctoral Career Development and Mobility Fellowships in Medical Device Research Evolving the CÚRAM Industry-Academia Training Initiative
European Commission
Find out more...LifETIME-CDT Grant No. 8/EPSRC-CDT/3583
The European Federation for the Study of Diabetes/Lily European Diabetes Research Programme
Health Research Board Grant No. EIA-2022-009
Regeneration of articular cartilage through biomaterial-controlled in situ cell reprogramming to recover youthful epigenetic information
Science Foundation Ireland
Find out more...History
Data Availability Statement
No data was used for the research described in the article.Comments
The original article is available at https://www.sciencedirect.com/Published Citation
Petit N, Chang YJ, Lobianco FA, Hodgkinson T, Browne S. Hyaluronic acid as a versatile building block for the development of biofunctional hydrogels: in vitro models and preclinical innovations. Mater Today Bio. 2025;31:101596.Publication Date
18 February 2025External DOI
Department/Unit
- Anatomy and Regenerative Medicine
- Tissue Engineering Research Group (TERG)
Research Area
- Biomaterials and Regenerative Medicine
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd.Version
- Published Version (Version of Record)