thiourea and catechol

thiourea has been researched along with catechol* in 5 studies

Other Studies

5 other study(ies) available for thiourea and catechol

ArticleYear
Mussel-Inspired Injectable Hydrogel Adhesive Formed under Mild Conditions Features Near-Native Tissue Properties.
    ACS applied materials & interfaces, 2019, Dec-26, Volume: 11, Issue:51

    Injectable hydrogel adhesives, especially those that can strongly adhere to tissues and feature near-native tissue mechanical properties, are desirable biomaterials for tissue repair. Compared to nonadhesive injectable hydrogels for minimally invasive delivery of therapeutic agents, they can better retain the delivered agents at targeted tissue locations and provide additional local physical barriers. However, regardless of recent advances, an ideal injectable hydrogel adhesive with both proper adhesion and mechanical matching between hydrogels and tissues is yet to be demonstrated with cytocompatible and efficient in situ curing methods. Inspired by marine mussels, where different mussel foot proteins (Mfps) function cooperatively to achieve excellent wet adhesion, we herein report a dual-mode-mimicking strategy by modifying gelatin (Gel) biopolymers with a single-type thiourea-catechol (TU-Cat) functionality to mimic two types of Mfps and their mode of action. This strategy features a minor, yet impactful modification of biopolymers, which gives access to collective properties of an ideal injectable hydrogel adhesive. Specifically, with TU-Cat functionalization of only ∼0.4-1.2 mol % of total amino acid residues, the Mfp-mimetic gelatin biopolymer (Gel-TU-Cat) can be injected and cured rapidly under mild and cytocompatible conditions, giving rise to tissue adhesive hydrogels with excellent matrix ductility, proper wet adhesion, and native tissue-like stress relaxation behaviors. Such a set of properties originating from our novel dual-mode-mimicking strategy makes the injectable hydrogel adhesive a promising platform for cell delivery and tissue repair.

    Topics: Animals; Biocompatible Materials; Bivalvia; Catechols; Gelatin; Hydrogels; Materials Testing; Polymers; Proteins; Thiourea; Tissue Adhesives

2019
Stretchable and Bioadhesive Supramolecular Hydrogels Activated by a One-Stone-Two-Bird Postgelation Functionalization Method.
    ACS applied materials & interfaces, 2019, May-08, Volume: 11, Issue:18

    Resembling soft tissues, stretchable hydrogels are promising biomaterials for many biomedical applications due to their excellent mechanical robustness. However, conventional stretchable hydrogels with a synthetic polymer matrix are usually bioinert. The lack of cell and tissue adhesiveness of such hydrogels limits their applications. An easy but reliable postgelation functionalization method is desirable. Herein, we report the fabrication of stretchable supramolecular hydrogels cross-linked by multivalent host-guest interactions. Such hydrogels containing thiourea ( TU) functionalities can be bioactivated with a catechol-modified peptide (Cat-RGD) via thiourea-catechol ( TU-Cat) coupling reaction. This postgelation bioactivation of the otherwise bioinert hydrogels not only conjugates bioactive ligands for cell attachment but also introduces and preserves the catechol structures for tissue adhesion. This straightforward fabrication and one-stone-two-bird bioactivation of the stretchable hydrogels may find broad applications in developing advanced soft biomaterials for tissue repair, wound dressing, and lesion sealing.

    Topics: Bandages; Biocompatible Materials; Catechols; Cell Adhesion; Drug Delivery Systems; Humans; Hydrogels; Ligands; Polymers; Thiourea; Tissue Adhesions

2019
Preserving the adhesion of catechol-conjugated hydrogels by thiourea-quinone coupling.
    Biomaterials science, 2016, Nov-15, Volume: 4, Issue:12

    Mussel adhesion has inspired the development of catechol-based adhesive polymers. However, conventional strategies require basic pH conditions and lead to the loss of adhesion. To solve the problem, we report the first attempt to use thiourea-functionalized polymers for preserving hydrogel adhesion. We believe that this simple thiourea-quinone coupling chemistry is instrumental to synthetic adhesive materials.

    Topics: Adhesives; Animals; Bivalvia; Catechols; Cross-Linking Reagents; Hydrogels; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Polymers; Quinones; Thiourea

2016
DARK PIGMENT FORMATION IN VERTICILLIUM ALBO-ATRUM.
    Nature, 1964, Apr-25, Volume: 202

    Topics: Ascorbic Acid; Catechols; Dihydroxyphenylalanine; Glass Ionomer Cements; Melanins; Metabolism; Pharmacology; Pigmentation; Research; Thiourea; Tyrosine; Tyrosine Decarboxylase; Verticillium

1964
[Pharmacological activity of structure with a labile hydrogen (hydroquinol, pyrocatechol, resorcinol and A.E.T.) on the arterial pressure of the rabbit, after sympathomimetics, sympatholytics, neuroplegics and ganglioplegics. Possible role of the reductio
    Agressologie: revue internationale de physio-biologie et de pharmacologie appliquees aux effets de l'agression, 1961, Volume: 2

    Topics: Animals; Blood Pressure; Catechols; Coenzymes; Hydrogen; Phenols; Rabbits; Resorcinols; Sympatholytics; Sympathomimetics; Thiourea

1961