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Bacterial cellulose-based hydrogel with regulated rehydration and enhanced antibacterial activity for wound healing

Lili Deng, Fangzhou Li, Zhiliang Han, Xiangyang Qu, Jing Li, Zhou Zhou, Shiyan Chen, Huaping Wang, Xiangguo Lv

2024International Journal of Biological Macromolecules38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Bacterial cellulose (BC) hydrogels are promising medical biomaterials that have been widely used for tissue repair, wound healing and cartilage engineering. However, the high water content of BC hydrogels increases the difficulty of storage and transportation. Moreover, they will lose their original hydrogel structure after dehydration, which severely limits their practical applications. Introducing the bio-based polyelectrolytes is expected to solve this problem. Here, we modified BC and combined it with quaternized chitosan (QCS) via a chemical reaction to obtain a dehydrated dialdehyde bacterial cellulose/quaternized chitosan (DBC/QCS) hydrogel with repeated swelling behavior and good antibacterial properties. The hydrogel can recover the initial state on the macro scale with a swelling ratio over 1000 % and possesses excellent antimicrobial properties against Escherichia coli (E. coli) and Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) with a killing rate of 80.8 % and 81.3 %, respectively. In addition, the hydrogel has excellent biocompatibility, which is conducive to the stretching of L929 cells. After 14 d of in vivo wound modeling in rats, it was found that the hydrogel loaded with pirfenidone (PFD) could promote collagen deposition and accelerate wound healing with scar prevention. This rehydratable hydrogel can be stored and transported under dry conditions, which is promising for practical applications.

Topics & Concepts

Self-healing hydrogelsBiocompatibilityWound healingBacterial celluloseChitosanSwellingChemistryBiomaterialStaphylococcus aureusTissue engineeringCelluloseChemical engineeringBiomedical engineeringMaterials sciencePolymer chemistryBacteriaOrganic chemistryComposite materialSurgeryBiologyEngineeringMedicineGeneticsWound Healing and TreatmentsSurgical Sutures and AdhesivesElectrospun Nanofibers in Biomedical Applications
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