3.8 Article

Electrospun Polyurethane-Gelatin Composite: A New Tissue-Engineered Scaffold for Application in Skin Regeneration and Repair of Complex Wounds

Journal

ACS BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
Volume 6, Issue 1, Pages 505-516

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsbiomaterials.9b00861

Keywords

gelatin-polycarbonate urethane; biodegradable; electrospinning; tissue engineering; skin regeneration

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health [123336]
  2. CFI Leader's Opportunity Fund [25407]
  3. Medicine by Design Seed award
  4. NIH [RO1 GM087285-01]
  5. Toronto Hydro

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Wound healing is vital for patients with complex wounds including burns. While the gold standard of skin transplantation ensures a surgical treatment to heal wounds, it has its limitations, for example, insufficient donor sites for patients with large burn wounds and creation of wounds and pain when harvesting the donor skin. Therefore, tissue engineered skin is of paramount importance. The aim of this study is to investigate and characterize an elastomeric acellular scaffold that would demonstrate the ability to promote skin regeneration. A hybrid gelatin-based electrospun scaffold is fabricated via the use of biodegradable polycarbonate polyurethane (PU). It is hypothesized that the addition of PU would enable a tailored degradation rate and an enhanced mechanical strength of electrospun gelatin. Introducing 20% PU to gelatin scaffolds (Gel80-PU20) results in a significant increase in the degradation resistance, yield strength, and elongation of these scaffolds without altering the cell viability. In vivo studies using a mouse excisional wound biopsy grafted with the scaffolds reveals that the Gel80-PU20 scaffold enables greater cell infiltration than clinically established matrices, for example, Integra (dermal regeneration matrix, DRM), a benchmark scaffold. Immunostaining shows fewer macrophages and myofibroblastic cells on the Gel80-PU20 scaffold when compared with the DRM. The findings show that electrospun Gel80-PU20 scaffolds hold potential for generating tissue substitutes and overcoming some limitations of conventional wound care matrices.

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