Conductive hybrid xanthan gum (XG)-polyaniline (PANI) biocomposites forming 3D structures able to mimic electrical biological functions are synthesized by a strong-acid free medium. In situ aniline oxidative chemical polymerizations are performed in XG water dispersions to produce stable XG-PANI pseudoplastic fluids. XG-PANI composites with 3D architectures are obtained by subsequent freeze-drying processes. The morphological investigation highlights the formation of porous structures; UV-vis and Raman spectroscopy characterizations assess the chemical structure of the produced composites. I-V measurements evidence electrical conductivity of the samples, while electrochemical analyses point out their capability to respond to electric stimuli with electron and ion exchanges in physiological-like environment. Trial tests on prostate cancer cells evaluate biocompatibility of the XG-PANI composite. Obtained results demonstrate that a strong acid-free route produces an electrically conductive and electrochemically active XG-PANI polymer composite. The investigation of charge transport and transfer, as well as of biocompatibility properties of composite materials produced in aqueous environments, brings new perspective for exploitation of such materials in biomedical applications. In particular, the developed strategy can be used to realize biomaterials working as scaffolds that require electrical stimulations for inducing cell growth and communication or for biosignals monitoring and analysis.

Pescosolido, F., Montaina, L., Carcione, R., Politi, S., Matassa, R., Carotenuto, F., et al. (2023). A new strong-acid free route to produce xanthan gum-PANI composite scaffold supporting bioelectricity. MACROMOLECULAR BIOSCIENCE [10.1002/mabi.202300132].

A new strong-acid free route to produce xanthan gum-PANI composite scaffold supporting bioelectricity

Pescosolido, Francesca;Montaina, Luca;Carcione, Rocco;Politi, Sara;Carotenuto, Felicia;Nardo, Paolo Di;Tamburri, Emanuela
2023-07-03

Abstract

Conductive hybrid xanthan gum (XG)-polyaniline (PANI) biocomposites forming 3D structures able to mimic electrical biological functions are synthesized by a strong-acid free medium. In situ aniline oxidative chemical polymerizations are performed in XG water dispersions to produce stable XG-PANI pseudoplastic fluids. XG-PANI composites with 3D architectures are obtained by subsequent freeze-drying processes. The morphological investigation highlights the formation of porous structures; UV-vis and Raman spectroscopy characterizations assess the chemical structure of the produced composites. I-V measurements evidence electrical conductivity of the samples, while electrochemical analyses point out their capability to respond to electric stimuli with electron and ion exchanges in physiological-like environment. Trial tests on prostate cancer cells evaluate biocompatibility of the XG-PANI composite. Obtained results demonstrate that a strong acid-free route produces an electrically conductive and electrochemically active XG-PANI polymer composite. The investigation of charge transport and transfer, as well as of biocompatibility properties of composite materials produced in aqueous environments, brings new perspective for exploitation of such materials in biomedical applications. In particular, the developed strategy can be used to realize biomaterials working as scaffolds that require electrical stimulations for inducing cell growth and communication or for biosignals monitoring and analysis.
3-lug-2023
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore CHIM/03
English
biomimetic materials
biosignals monitoring
conducting polymers
natural polysaccharide
tissue engineering
Pescosolido, F., Montaina, L., Carcione, R., Politi, S., Matassa, R., Carotenuto, F., et al. (2023). A new strong-acid free route to produce xanthan gum-PANI composite scaffold supporting bioelectricity. MACROMOLECULAR BIOSCIENCE [10.1002/mabi.202300132].
Pescosolido, F; Montaina, L; Carcione, R; Politi, S; Matassa, R; Carotenuto, F; Nottola, Sa; Nardo, Pd; Tamburri, E
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/340003
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