4.7 Article

Generation of a novel human dermal substitute functionalized with antibiotic-loaded nanostructured lipid carriers (NLCs) with antimicrobial properties for tissue engineering

Journal

JOURNAL OF NANOBIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12951-020-00732-0

Keywords

Tissue engineering; Functionalization; Dermal substitute; Severe burns; Human skin; Nanostructured lipid carriers; Colistimethate; Amikacin

Funding

  1. NanoGSkin project of EuroNanoMed-III (ERA-NET Cofund scheme of the Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Framework Programme), EU
  2. Instituto de Salud Carlos III-ISCIII [AC17/00013]
  3. Centro para el Desarrollo Tecnologico Industrial -CDTI [00108589]
  4. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation
  5. Consejeria de Salud y Familias, Junta de Andalucia, Spain [PE-0395-2019]
  6. Fundacion Benefica Anticancer San Francisco Javier y Santa Candida, Granada, Spain
  7. Department of Economic Development and Infrastructure of the Basque Government budget, through the HAZITEK business R + D support program [ZE-2017/00014]
  8. European Regional Development Fund (ERDF)
  9. [OTRI.35A-07]

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Background: Treatment of patients affected by severe burns is challenging, especially due to the high risk of Pseudomonas infection. In the present work, we have generated a novel model of bioartificial human dermis substitute by tissue engineering to treat infected wounds using fibrin-agarose biomaterials functionalized with nanostructured lipid carriers (NLCs) loaded with two anti-Pseudomonas antibiotics: sodium colistimethate (SCM) and amikacin (AMK). Results: Results show that the novel tissue-like substitutes have strong antibacterial effect on Pseudomonas cultures, directly proportional to the NLC concentration. Free DNA quantification, WST-1 and Caspase 7 immunohistochemical assays in the functionalized dermis substitute demonstrated that neither cell viability nor cell proliferation were affected by functionalization in most study groups. Furthermore, immunohistochemistry for PCNA and KI67 and histochemistry for collagen and proteoglycans revealed that cells proliferated and were metabolically active in the functionalized tissue with no differences with controls. When functionalized tissues were biomechanically characterized, we found that NLCs were able to improve some of the major biomechanical properties of these artificial tissues, although this strongly depended on the type and concentration of NLCs. Conclusions: These results suggest that functionalization of fibrin-agarose human dermal substitutes with antibiotic-loaded NLCs is able to improve the antibacterial and biomechanical properties of these substitutes with no detectable side effects. This opens the door to future clinical use of functionalized tissues.

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