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DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1010013108
¤ OpenAccess: Green
This work has “Green” OA status. This means it may cost money to access on the publisher landing page, but there is a free copy in an OA repository.

Using mechanobiological mimicry of red blood cells to extend circulation times of hydrogel microparticles

Timothy J. Merkel,Stephen Jones,Kevin P. Herlihy,Farrell R. Kersey,Adam R. Shields,Mary E. Napier,J. Christopher Luft,Huali Wu,William C. Zamboni,Andrew Z. Wang,James E. Bear,Joseph M. DeSimone

Biodistribution
Biophysics
Elasticity (physics)
2011
It has long been hypothesized that elastic modulus governs the biodistribution and circulation times of particles and cells in blood; however, this notion has never been rigorously tested. We synthesized hydrogel microparticles with tunable elasticity in the physiological range, which resemble red blood cells in size and shape, and tested their behavior in vivo. Decreasing the modulus of these particles altered their biodistribution properties, allowing them to bypass several organs, such as the lung, that entrapped their more rigid counterparts, resulting in increasingly longer circulation times well past those of conventional microparticles. An 8-fold decrease in hydrogel modulus correlated to a greater than 30-fold increase in the elimination phase half-life for these particles. These results demonstrate a critical design parameter for hydrogel microparticles.
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    Using mechanobiological mimicry of red blood cells to extend circulation times of hydrogel microparticles” is a paper by Timothy J. Merkel Stephen Jones Kevin P. Herlihy Farrell R. Kersey Adam R. Shields Mary E. Napier J. Christopher Luft Huali Wu William C. Zamboni Andrew Z. Wang James E. Bear Joseph M. DeSimone published in 2011. It has an Open Access status of “green”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.