4.8 Article

CuS Hybrid Hydrogel for Near-Infrared-Enhanced Infected Wound Healing: A Gelatin-Assisted Synthesis and Direct Incorporation Strategy

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 15, Issue 19, Pages 22929-22943

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.3c02241

Keywords

copper sulfide; hydrogel; photothermal; photodynamic; wound healing

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A CuS hybrid hydrogel was constructed for infected wound healing applications using a gelatin-assisted synthesis and direct incorporation strategy. The hydrogel exhibited good mechanical strength, self-healing ability, and resistance to bacterial invasion, and it accelerated skin regeneration. This work provides a promising strategy for synthesizing functional inorganic nanomaterials embedded inside modified natural hydrogel networks for wound healing applications.
Developing antibacterial hydrogels, with good mechanical strength and self-healing ability to resist bacterial invasion and accelerate skin regeneration, is critical for infected full-thickness skin wound treatment. Herein, we report a gelatin-assisted synthesis and direct incorporation strategy to construct a CuS hybrid hydrogel for infected wound healing applications. CuS nanodots (NDs) were synthesized directly inside a gelatin host matrix (GelCuS), and these tightly confined and evenly distributed CuS NDs displayed superb dispersibility and stability against oxidation. Gel-CuS was then used to crosslink with oxidized dextran (ODex) to form a Gel-CuS-8/ODex hydrogel (8 stands for the concentration of CuS, in mM) via a facile Schiff-base reaction, which exhibited improved mechanical properties, excellent adhesion and self-healing ability, suitable swelling and degradation behavior, and good biocompatibility. The Gel-CuS-8/ODex hydrogel can act as an efficient antibacterial agent due to its photothermal and photodynamic properties under a 1064 nm laser irradiation. Furthermore, in animal experiments, when being applied as wound dressing, the Gel-CuS-8/ODex hydrogel significantly promoted infected full-thickness cutaneous wound healing through improved epidermis and granulation tissue formation and accelerated generation of new blood vessels, hair follicles, and collagen deposition after proper near-infrared irradiation treatment. This work provides a promising strategy to synthesize functional inorganic nanomaterials tightly and evenly embedded inside modified natural hydrogel networks for wound healing applications.

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