4.8 Article

Wound Dressing Hydrogel of Enteromorpha prolifera Polysaccharide-Polyacrylamide Composite: A Facile Transformation of Marine Blooming into Biomedical Material

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 12, Pages 14543-14555

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c21543

Keywords

Enteromorpha prolifera polysaccharides; high-strength hydrogel; self-healing; tissue adhesiveness; antioxidant; wound dressing

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFC1105602]
  2. Key R&D Program of Shandong Province [2019GSF107031]

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The study has developed a PEP-PAM hydrogel composed of natural macromolecules, demonstrating high mechanical strength and self-healing ability. This hydrogel promotes cell proliferation and wound healing, showing potential as an effective wound dressing material.
Great endeavors have been dedicated to the development of wound dressing materials. However, there is still a demand for developing a wound dressing hydrogel that integrates natural macromolecules without requiring extra chemical modifications, so as to enable a facile transformation and practical application in wound healing. Herein, a composite hydrogel was prepared with water-soluble polysaccharides from Enteromorpha prolifera (PEP) cross-linked with boric acid and polyacrylamide cross-linked via polymerization (PAM) using a one-pot method. The dual-network of this hydrogel enabled it to have an ultratough mechanical strength. Moreover, interfacial characterizations reflected that the hydrogen bonds and dynamic hydroxyl-borate bonds contributed to the self-healing ability of the PEP-PAM hydrogel, and the surface groups on the hydrogel allowed for tissue adhesiveness and natural antioxidant properties. Additionally, human epidermal growth factor-loaded PEP-PAM hydrogel promoted cell proliferation and migration in vitro and significantly accelerated wound healing in vivo on model rats. These progresses suggested a prospect for the PEP-PAM hydrogel as an effective and easily available wound dressing material. Remarkably, this work showcases that a wound dressing hydrogel can be facially developed by using natural polysaccharides as a one component and offers a new route for the high-value utilization of disastrous marine blooming biomass by transforming it into a biomedical material.

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