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Tissue‐Penetrating Ultrasound‐Triggered Hydrogel for Promoting Microvascular Network Reconstruction

Zhenyu Zhao, Yin Zhang, Meng Chen, Xiaoyun Xie, Wenguo Cui, Keqiang Zuo

2024Advanced Science12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The microvascular network plays an important role in providing nutrients to the injured tissue and exchanging various metabolites. However, how to achieve efficient penetration of the injured tissue is an important bottleneck restricting the reconstruction of microvascular network. Herein, the hydrogel precursor solution can efficiently penetrate the damaged tissue area, and ultrasound triggers the release of thrombin from liposomes in the solution to hydrolyze fibrinogen, forming a fibrin solid hydrogel network in situ with calcium ions and transglutaminase as catalysts, effectively solving the penetration impedance bottleneck of damaged tissues and ultimately significantly promoting the formation of microvascular networks within tissues. First, the fibrinogen complex solution is effectively permeated into the injured tissue. Second, ultrasound triggered the release of calcium ions and thrombin, activates transglutaminase, and hydrolyzes fibrinogen. Third, fibrin monomers are catalyzed to form fibrin hydrogels in situ in the damaged tissue area. In vitro studies have shown that the fibrinogen complex solution effectively penetrated the artificial bone tissue within 15 s after ultrasonic triggering, and formed a hydrogel after continuous triggering for 30 s. Overall, this innovative strategy effectively solved the problem of penetration resistance of ultrasound-triggered hydrogels in the injured tissues, and finally activates in situ microvascular networks regeneration.

Topics & Concepts

FibrinSelf-healing hydrogelsPenetration (warfare)ThrombinBiomedical engineeringBiophysicsMaterials scienceChemistryTissue engineeringImmunologyPolymer chemistryBiologyMedicinePlateletEngineeringOperations research3D Printing in Biomedical ResearchTendon Structure and TreatmentBlood properties and coagulation