4.8 Article

Skin-inspired gelatin-based flexible bio-electronic hydrogel for wound healing promotion and motion sensing

Journal

BIOMATERIALS
Volume 276, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2021.121026

Keywords

Gelatin hydrogels; FLexible bio-electronics; Electric stimulation; Motion sensor; Wound healing

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21808133, 21804084]
  2. Science and Technology Project of Xianyang City [2018k02-28]
  3. Fellowship of China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2021M692000]
  4. Basic Research Project of Wenzhou City [2019Y1073]
  5. National Global Talents Recruitment Program
  6. State Key Laboratory of Polymer Materials Engineering
  7. Double First Class University Plan
  8. Key Laboratory of Leather Chemistry and Engineering
  9. National Engineering Research Center of Clean Technology in Leather Industry

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The study introduces a mechanically-flexible, electroactive, and self-healable hydrogel (MESGel) with outstanding biocompatibility and multifunctional therapeutic properties. Experimental results demonstrate that MESGel can effectively promote cell proliferation, accelerate skin wound healing, and has the potential to be a novel flexible electronic skin sensor.
Next generation tissue-engineered skin scaffolds promise to provide sensory restoration through electrical stimulation in addition to effectively rebuilding and repairing skin. The integration of real-time monitoring of the injury motion activities can fundamentally improve the therapeutic efficacy by providing detailed data to guide the clinical practice. Herein, a mechanically-flexible, electroactive, and self-healable hydrogels (MESGel) was engineered for the combinational function of electrically-stimulated accelerated wound healing and motion sensing. MESGel shows outstanding biocompatibility and multifunctional therapeutic properties including flexibility, self-healing characteristics, biodegradability, and bioelectroactivity. Moreover, MESGel shows its potential of being a novel flexible electronic skin sensor to record the injury motion activities. Comprehensive in vitro and in vivo experiments prove that MESGel can facilitate effective electrical stimulation, actively promoting proliferation in Chinese hamster lung epithelial cells and therefore can accelerate favorable epithelial biology during skin wound healing, demonstrating an effective therapeutic strategy for a full-thickness skin defect model and leading to new-type flexible bioelectronics.

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