Abstract
The design of hydrogels based on natural polymers that have modulation of antibacterial capacity, ideal performance in release capacity of encapsulated drugs, and desired bioactivity for applications in wound healing represents a modern trend in biomaterials. In this work, novel hydrogels of semi-interpenetrating polymeric networks based on collagen and xanthan gum (XG) were investigated. The linear chains of XG can semi-interpenetrate inside to matrix of crosslinked collagen with polyurethane under physiological conditions, generating amorphous surfaces with fibrillar-granular reliefs that have accelerated gelation time (about 15 min), super water absorption (up to 3100%) and high inhibition capacity of pathogenic bacteria such as Escherichia coli (up to 100% compared to amoxicillin at 20 ppm). The increment of XG in the hydrogel (up to 20 wt.%) allows for improvement in the storage module, resistance to thermal degradation, slow the rate of hydrolytic and proteolytic degradation, allowing to encapsulate and controlled release of molecules such as ketorolac and methylene blue; besides, it shows to keep the metabolic activity of fibroblasts and monocytes at 48 h of evaluation, without observing cytotoxic effects. The bioactivity of these hydrogels is improved since they have excellent hemocompatibility and enhanced cell proliferation. Specifically, the hydrogel with 20 wt.% of XG shows to decrease the production of tumor necrosis factor-α and CCL-2 cytokines, increasing the production of transforming growth factor-β in human monocytes, which could be used to modulate inflammation and regenerative capacity in wound healing strategies.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Gutierrez-Reyes, J. E., Caldera-Villalobos, M., Claudio-Rizo, J. A., Cabrera-Munguía, D. A., Becerra-Rodriguez, J. J., Soriano-Corral, F., & Herrera-Guerrero, A. (2023). Smart collagen/xanthan gum-based hydrogels with antibacterial effect, drug release capacity and excellent performance in vitro bioactivity for wound healing application. Biomedical Materials (Bristol), 18(3). https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-605X/acc99c
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.