Enzymatic Degradation of Poly(L‐lactide) and Poly(ε‐caprolactone) Electrospun Fibers
- 7 December 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Macromolecular Bioscience
- Vol. 4 (12), 1118-1125
- https://doi.org/10.1002/mabi.200400092
Abstract
Poly(L-lactide) (PLLA) and poly(epsilon-caprolactone) (PCL) ultrafine fibers were prepared by electrospinning. The influence of cationic and anionic surfactants on their enzymatic degradation behavior was investigated by measuring weight loss, molecular weight, crystallinity, and melting temperature of the fibers as a function of degradation time. Under the catalysis of proteinase K, the PLLA fibers containing the anionic surfactant sodium docecyl sulfate (SDS) exhibited a faster degradation rate than those containing cationic surfactant triethylbenzylammonium chloride (TEBAC), indicating that surface electric charge on the fibers is a critical factor for an enzymatic degradation. Similarly, TEBAC-containing PCL fibers exhibited a 47% weight loss within 8.5 h whereas SDS-containing PCL fibers showed little degradation in the presence of lipase PS. By analyzing the charge status of proteinase K and lipase PS under the experimental conditions, the importance of the surface charges of the fibers and their interactions with the charges on the enzymes were revealed. Consequently, a "two-step" degradation mechanism was proposed: (1) the enzyme approaches the fiber surface; (2) the enzyme initiates hydrolysis of the polymer. By means of differential scanning calorimetry and wide-angle X-ray diffraction, the crystallinity and orientation changes in the PLLA and PCL fibers during the enzymatic degradation were investigated, respectively.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ultrafine fibers electrospun from biodegradable polymersJournal of Applied Polymer Science, 2003
- Electrospinning and Stabilization of Fully Hydrolyzed Poly(Vinyl Alcohol) FibersChemistry of Materials, 2003
- Structure and Morphology Changes during in Vitro Degradation of Electrospun Poly(glycolide-co-lactide) Nanofiber MembraneBiomacromolecules, 2003
- Characterization of nano-structured poly(ε-caprolactone) nonwoven mats via electrospinningPolymer, 2003
- Structure and process relationship of electrospun bioabsorbable nanofiber membranesPolymer, 2002
- Influence of Crystallinity and Stereochemistry on the Enzymatic Degradation of Poly(lactide)sMacromolecules, 1999
- A novel laser light-scattering study of enzymatic biodegradation of poly(ε-caprolactone) nanoparticlesPolymer, 1999
- A novel method of studying polymer biodegradationPolymer, 1998
- Synthesis and characterization of poly(N-acyl orN-aroyl ethylenimines) containing various pendant functional groups. III. Copolymers with pendant epoxy and imidazole groupsJournal of Polymer Science Part A: Polymer Chemistry, 1996
- Enzymatic Degradability of Poly(lactide): Effects of Chain Stereochemistry and Material CrystallinityMacromolecules, 1996