Plant-Based, Hydrogel-like Microfibers as an Antioxidant Platform for Skin Burn Healing.

ACS Appl Bio Mater

Smart Materials Group, Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, Via Morego 30, Genova 16163, Italy.

Published: August 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Natural polymers from organic wastes are being increasingly used in the biomedical field for creating eco-friendly devices, like bandages, that support healing and degrade without releasing toxins.
  • - The study proposes a microfibrous scaffold made from zein and pectin, loaded with vitamin C to enhance skin healing and protect against UV damage, using electrospinning and cross-linking techniques.
  • - Results show that the vitamin C in the scaffolds promotes collagen production in skin cells and reduces oxidative stress, with in vivo tests indicating a significant reduction in inflammatory cytokines in a mouse model with UVB-induced skin damage.

Article Abstract

Natural polymers from organic wastes have gained increasing attention in the biomedical field as resourceful second raw materials for the design of biomedical devices which can perform a specific bioactive function and eventually degrade without liberating toxic residues in the surroundings. In this context, patches and bandages, that need to support the skin wound healing process for a short amount of time to be then discarded, certainly constitute good candidates in our quest for a more environmentally friendly management. Here, we propose a plant-based microfibrous scaffold, loaded with vitamin C (VitC), a bioactive molecule which acts as a protecting agent against UV damages and as a wound healing promoter. Fibers were fabricated via electrospinning from various zein/pectin formulations, and subsequently cross-linked in the presence of Ca to confer them a hydrogel-like behavior, which we exploited to tune both the drug release profile and the scaffold degradation. A comprehensive characterization of the physico-chemical properties of the zein/pectin/VitC scaffolds, either pristine or cross-linked, has been carried out, together with the bioactivity assessment with two representative skin cell populations (human dermal fibroblast cells and skin keratinocytes, HaCaT cells). Interestingly, col-1a gene expression of dermal fibroblasts increased after 3 days of growth in the presence of the microfiber extraction media, indicating that the released VitC was able to stimulate collagen mRNA production overtime. Antioxidant activity was analyzed on HaCaT cells via DCFH-DA assay, highlighting a fluorescence intensity decrease proportional to the amount of loaded VitC (down to 50 and 30%), confirming the protective effect of the matrices against oxidative stress. Finally, the most performing samples were selected for the in vivo test on a skin UVB-burn mouse model, where our constructs demonstrated to significantly reduce the inflammatory cytokines expression in the injured area (50% lower than the control), thus constituting a promising, environmentally sustainable alternative to skin patches.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10445266PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsabm.3c00214DOI Listing

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