AI Article Synopsis

  • Scientists created special gels made from elastin to help heal wounds faster.
  • These gels help the body's natural healing cells do their job better and make new blood vessels.
  • In tests on mice, these gels worked really well, bringing in important healing cells and helping the skin to repair itself.

Article Abstract

Harnessing the inflammation and angiogenesis is extremely important in wound healing. In this study, we developed bioactive elastin-based hydrogels which can recruit and modulate the innate immune cells and accelerate angiogenesis in the wound site and subsequently improve wound regeneration. These hydrogels were formed by visible-light cross-linking of acryloyl-(polyethylene glycol)-N-hydroxysuccinimide ester modified elastin with methacrylated gelatin, in order to mimic dermal microenvironment. These hydrogels showed highly tunable mechanical properties, swelling ratios and enzymatic degradation profiles, with moduli within the range of human skin. To mimic the degradation of the elastin by elastase from neutrophils, co-culture of the hydrogels and neutrophils was conducted. The derived conditioned medium containing elastin derived peptides (EDP-conditioned medium) promoted the expression of both M1 and M2 markers in M1 macrophages . Additionally, the EDP-conditioned medium induced superior tube formation of endothelia cells in Matrigel. In mice wound model, these elastin-based hydrogels attracted abundant neutrophils and predominant M2 macrophages to the wound and supported their infiltration into the hydrogels. The outstanding immunomodulatory effect of the elastin-based hydrogels resulted in superior angiogenesis, collagen deposition and dermal regeneration. Hence, these elastin-based hydrogels can be a promising regenerative platform to accelerate wound repair.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9157562PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mtbio.2022.100300DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Scientists created special gels made from elastin to help heal wounds faster.
  • These gels help the body's natural healing cells do their job better and make new blood vessels.
  • In tests on mice, these gels worked really well, bringing in important healing cells and helping the skin to repair itself.
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Injectable Hydrogels of Stimuli-Responsive Elastin and Calmodulin-Based Triblock Copolypeptides for Controlled Drug Release.

Biomacromolecules

May 2022

Department of Bionano Engineering and Department of Bionanotechnology, Center for Bionano Intelligence Education and Research, Hanyang University, Ansan 15588, Republic of Korea.

A variety of block copolypeptides with stimuli responsiveness have been of growing interest for dynamic self-assembly. Here, multistimuli-responsive triblock copolypeptides composed of thermosensitive elastin-based polypeptides (EBP) and ligand-responsive calmodulin (CalM) were genetically engineered, over-expressed, and nonchromatographically purified by inverse transition cycling. Diluted EBP-CalM-EBP (ECE) triblock copolypeptides under physiological conditions self-assembled into vesicles at the nanoscale by temperature-triggered aggregation of the EBP block with lower critical solution temperature behaviors.

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Stroke and cardiovascular episodes are still some of the most common diseases worldwide, causing millions of deaths and costing billions of Euros to healthcare systems. The use of new biomaterials with enhanced biological and physical properties has opened the door to new approaches in cardiovascular applications. Elastin-based materials are biomaterials with some of the most promising properties.

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Wound dressing based on naturally derived polymer provides a useful platform for treatment of skin injuries. Owing to the high mechanical strength and tunable structural and physicochemical properties of human elastin-like polypeptides (ELPs), they may be used as excellent materials for fabricating biocompatible scaffolds and other products for wound management. Designing recombinant ELPs mimicking natural elastin to fabricate synthetic polymers suitable for human health care has generated significant interest.

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pH-Sensitive Mechanical Properties of Elastin-Based Hydrogels.

Macromol Biosci

April 2020

Davidson School of Chemical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, 47907-2100, USA.

Ionizable amino acids in protein-based hydrogels can confer pH-responsive behavior. Because elastin-like polypeptides (ELPs) have an established sequence and can crosslink to form hydrogels, they are an ideal system for creating pH-sensitive materials. This study examines different parameters that might affect pH-sensitive behavior and characterizes the mechanical and physical properties between pH 3 and 11 of three ELP-based crosslinked hydrogels.

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