| Literature DB >> 34569171 |
Yu Zhang1, Haixia Wu1, Peipei Li1, Wenxin Liu1, Yanling Zhang1, Alideertu Dong1.
Abstract
Most injectable hydrogels used in biomedical engineering have unsatisfactory and untunable mechanical properties, making it difficult to match them with the mechanical strengths of different tissues and organs, which can cause a series of adverse consequences such as immune rejection and soft tissue contusion. In this contribution, dopamine-modified hyaluronic acid (HA-DA) is developed as the backbone for an injectable hydrogel using a catechol-Fe3+ coordination crosslinking strategy. Due to dynamic physical crosslinking, the hydrogel can be easily injected through a single syringe. Into the hydrogel, black phosphorous nanosheets loaded with a Zr-based porphyrinic metal-organic framework (PCN@BP) are introduced that could generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) under 660 nm laser irradiation, this promotes the oxidative coupling of dopamine in the presence of the ROS, introducing in situ chemical crosslinking into the hydrogel. A physical/chemical double-crosslinked hydrogel is obtained, effectively improving the hydrogel's mechanical properties, which are tuned in situ by adjusting the irradiation time to match the mechanical modulus of different biological tissues. Combining the excellent photothermal properties and photodynamic performance of the PCN@BP nanosheets yields effective sterilization under mild conditions (below 50 °C, low ROS production). The results show that this hydrogel is an excellent multifunctional wound dressing.Entities:
Keywords: black phosphorous; injectable hydrogels; photothermal and photodynamic antibacterial properties; tunable mechanical properties; wound healing
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34569171 DOI: 10.1002/adhm.202101722
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Healthc Mater ISSN: 2192-2640 Impact factor: 9.933