ROS-scavenging hydrogel to promote healing of bacteria infected diabetic wounds

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Abstract

Bacterial infection has been a great threat to dermal wounds, especially to difficult-to-heal diabetic wounds. It is known that reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated by wounds or bacterial infection could further impede wound healing. Here, a type of ROS-scavenging hydrogel is developed by using polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) cross-linked by a ROS-responsive linker. The obtained hydrogel could act as an effective ROS-scavenging agent to promote the wound closure by decreasing the ROS level and up-regulating M2 phenotype macrophages around the wound. Importantly, such hydrogel formed in the wound could allow release of therapeutics, including mupirocin to kill bacteria, and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) to accelerate the wound closure, in responsive to endogenous ROS existing in the wound microenvironment. Remarkably, our drug-loaded ROS-scavenging hydrogel could be employed to effectively treat various types of wounds including difficult-to-heal diabetic wounds with bacterial infection. Therefore, this work presents an effective strategy based on ROS-scavenging hydrogel for wound healing under various kinds of complications.

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Zhao, H., Huang, J., Li, Y., Lv, X., Zhou, H., Wang, H., … Liu, Z. (2020). ROS-scavenging hydrogel to promote healing of bacteria infected diabetic wounds. Biomaterials, 258. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biomaterials.2020.120286

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