4.8 Article

Injectable Hypoxia-Induced Conductive Hydrogel to Promote Diabetic Wound Healing

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 12, Issue 51, Pages 56681-56691

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c13197

Keywords

diabetic wound; injectable hydrogel; hypoxia microenvironment; conductivity; ADSCs

Funding

  1. Excellent Young Scientists Fund by the National Natural Science Foundation of China [31822020]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFA0108700, 2017YFA0105602]
  3. NSFC Projects of International Cooperation and Exchanges [81720108004]
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31870965]

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Injectable hydrogels with the capability to cast a hypoxic microenvironment is of great potentialities to develop novel therapies for tissue regeneration. However, the relative research still remains at the conceptual phase. Herein, we chose diabetic wound as a representative injury model to explore the actual therapeutic results of tissue injury by injectable hypoxia-induced hydrogels. To enhance recovery and widen applicability, the hypoxia-induced system was incorporated with a conductive network by an original sequentially interpenetrating technique based on the combination of a fast click chemistry and a slow enzymatic mediated cross-linking. Hyperbranched poly(beta-amino ester)-tetraaniline (PBAE-TA) was cross-linked with thiolated hyaluronic acid (HA-SH) via a thiol-ene click reaction, contributing to the rapid formation of the first conductive network, where vanillin-grafted gelatin (Geln-Van) and laccase (Lac) with a slow cross-linking rate were employed in casting a hypoxic microenvironment. The as-prepared injectable hydrogels possessed both suitable conductivity and sustainable hypoxia-inducing capability to upregulate the hypoxia-inducible factor-la and connexin 43 expressions of the encapsulated adipose-derived stem cells, which enhanced vascular regeneration and immunoregulation and further promoted the reconstruction of blood vessels, hair follicles, and dermal collagen matrix, eventually leading to the recovery of diabetic rat skin wounds and restoration of skin functions. This work provides a promising strategy to broaden the applicability of diverse hydrogels with a long time-consuming gelation process and to integrate different networks with various biological functions for the therapies of diabetic wounds and other complex clinical symptoms.

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