Injectable Tissue-Adhesive Hydrogel for Photothermal/Chemodynamic Synergistic Antibacterial and Wound Healing Promotion.
Han HuangYan SuChenxi WangBing LeiXuejiao SongWenjun WangPan WuXiyu LiuXiaochen DongLiping ZhongPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
It is an exigent need for the development of hydrogel dressings with desirable injectability, good adhesive, antibacterial, and wound healing promotion properties. Herein, the multifunctional injectable hydrogels with good tissue adhesion are designed based on Ag-doped Mo 2 C-derived polyoxometalate (AgPOM) nanoparticles, urea, gelatin, and tea polyphenols (TPs) for antibacterial and wound healing acceleration. After being injected into the tissue, urea diffuses out under the concentration gradient, and TPs and gelatin chains recombine to trigger the in situ formation of hydrogel with excellent adhesiveness. AgPOM fixed in the hydrogel could not only react with hydrogen peroxide in the infection site to generate singlet oxygen to kill the bacteria but also convert near-infrared light into heat under 1060 nm laser irradiation to realize sterilization. In vitro studies display the high bactericidal ability of the hydrogel against drug-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and also exhibit a prominent therapeutic effect on infected wounds through synergistic photothermal/chemodynamic therapy and accelerate wound healing. Hence, the injectable hydrogel with AgPOM as the antimicrobial agent can be a novel therapeutic agent for drug-resistant bacteria-infected wounds and wound healing promotion.
Keyphrases
- wound healing
- drug resistant
- hyaluronic acid
- multidrug resistant
- hydrogen peroxide
- cancer therapy
- staphylococcus aureus
- acinetobacter baumannii
- tissue engineering
- drug delivery
- photodynamic therapy
- quantum dots
- biofilm formation
- drug release
- bone marrow
- mesenchymal stem cells
- stem cells
- heat stress
- escherichia coli
- cell therapy
- methicillin resistant staphylococcus aureus
- anti inflammatory
- smoking cessation
- candida albicans
- silver nanoparticles