4.8 Article

A facile and general method for synthesis of antibiotic-free protein-based hydrogel: Wound dressing for the eradication of drug-resistant bacteria and biofilms

Journal

BIOACTIVE MATERIALS
Volume 18, Issue -, Pages 446-458

Publisher

KEAI PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bioactmat.2022.03.033

Keywords

THPS; Protein hydrogel; Bacterial resistance; Anti-Biofilm; Wound dressing

Funding

  1. Harvard Medical School/Brigham and Women's Hospital Department of Anesthesiology-Basic Scientist Grant [2420 BPA075]
  2. Center for Nanomedicine Research Fund [2019A014810]
  3. American Heart Association (AHA) Collaborative Sciences Award [2018A004190]
  4. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2020M683173]
  5. Gillian Reny Stepping Strong Center for Trauma Innovation Breakthrough Innovator Award [113548]
  6. Nanotechnology Foundation [2022A002721]
  7. Farokhzad Family Distinguished Chair Foundation
  8. Khoury Innovation Award [2020A003219]

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This study developed a simple and universal method to construct antibiotic-free protein hydrogels that can overcome drug-resistant bacteria and biofilm infections, promoting wound healing.
Antibacterial protein hydrogels are receiving increasing attention in the aspect of bacteria-infected-wound healing. However, bacterial drug resistance and biofilm infections lead to hard healing of wounds, thus the construction of biological agents that can overcome these issues is essential. Here, a simple and universal method to construct antibiotic-free protein hydrogel with excellent biocompatibility and superior antibacterial activity against drug-resistant bacteria and biofilms was developed. The green industrial microbicide tetrakis (hydroxymethyl) phosphonium sulfate (THPS) as cross-linking agent can be quickly cross-linked with model protein bovine serum albumin (BSA) to form antibacterial hydrogel through simple mixing without any other initiators, subsequently promoting drug-resistance bacteria-infected wound healing. This simple gelatinization strategy allows at least ten different proteins to form hydrogels (e.g. BSA, human serum albumin (HSA), egg albumin, chymotrypsin, trypsin, lysozyme, transferrin, myohemoglobin, hemoglobin, and phycocyanin) under the same conditions, showing prominent universality. Furthermore, drug-resistance bacteria and biofilm could be efficiently destroyed by the representative BSA hydrogel (B-Hydrogel) with antibacterial activity, overcoming biofilm-induced bacterial resistance. The in vivo study demonstrated that the B-Hydrogel as wound dressing can promote reepithelization to accelerate the healing of methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)-infected skin wounds without inducing significant side-effect. This readily accessible antibiotic-free protein-based hydrogel not only opens an avenue to provide a facile, feasible and general gelation strategy, but also exhibits promising application in hospital and community MRSA disinfection and treatment.

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