Carbonized Polymer Dot-Tannic Acid Nanoglue: Tissue Reinforcement with Concurrent Fluorescent Tracking, Insulin Delivery, and Reactive Oxygen Species Regulation for Normal and Diabetic Wound Healing.
Maansi AggarwalDeepinder ShardaShruti SrivastavaDinesh Kumar KotneesDiptiman ChoudhuryProlay DasPublished in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2024)
Nanotizing biosealant components offer a multitude of chemical functionalities for superior adhesion-cohesion, delivering unique properties for comprehensive wound healing that are otherwise impossible to achieve using commercial variants. For the first time, a two-step controlled hydrothermal pyrolysis is reported to nanotize dopamine, phloroglucinol, and glutaraldehyde into carbon dot (CD) to be subsequently converted into carbonized polymer dot (CPD) with gelatin as a co-substrate. Chemical crosslinking of CD with gelatin through Schiff base formation before the second pyrolysis step ensures a complex yet porous polymeric network. The retention of chemical functionalities indigenous to CD substrates and gelatin along with the preservation of CD photoluminescence in CPD for optical tracking is achieved. A unique nanoformulation is created with the CPD through tannic acid (TA) grafting evolving CPD-TA nanoglue demonstrating ≈1.32 MPa strength in lap shear tests conducted on porcine skin, surpassing traditional bioadhesives. CPD-TA nanoglue uploaded insulin as chosen cargo disbursal at the wound site for healing normal and in vitro diabetic wound models using HEKa cells with extraordinary biocompatibility. Most importantly, CPD-TA can generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) and scavenge simultaneously under ambient conditions (23 W white LED or dark) for on-demand sterilization or aiding wound recovery through ROS scavenging.
Keyphrases
- wound healing
- reactive oxygen species
- type diabetes
- tissue engineering
- quantum dots
- induced apoptosis
- cell death
- energy transfer
- hyaluronic acid
- squamous cell carcinoma
- sewage sludge
- municipal solid waste
- radiation therapy
- gene expression
- escherichia coli
- mass spectrometry
- oxidative stress
- drug delivery
- copy number
- cystic fibrosis
- cell proliferation
- uric acid
- living cells
- skeletal muscle
- insulin resistance
- genome wide
- surgical site infection