High moisture permeability, excellent
mechanical properties in
a wet state, high water-holding capability, and high exudate absorption
make bacterial nanocellulose (BNC) a favorable candidate for biomedical
device production, especially wound dressings. The lack of antibacterial
activity and healing-promoting ability are the main drawbacks that
limit its wide application. Pullulan (Pul) is a nontoxic polymer that
can promote wound healing. Zinc oxide nanoparticles (ZnO-NPs) are
well-known as a safe antibacterial agent. In this study, aminoalkylsilane
was chemically grafted on a BNC membrane (A-g-BNC)
and used as a bridge to combine BNC with Pul-ZnO-NPs hybrid electrospun
nanofibers. FTIR results confirmed the successful production of A-g-BNC/Pul-ZnO. The obtained dressing demonstrated blood
clotting performance better than that of BNC. The dressing showed
an ability to release ZnO, and its antibacterial activity was up to
5 log values higher than that of BNC. The cytotoxicity of the dressing
toward L929 fibroblast cells clearly showed safety due to the proliferation
of fibroblast cells. The animal test in a rat model indicated faster
healing and re-epithelialization, small blood vessel formation, and
collagen synthesis in the wounds covered by A-g-BNC/Pul-ZnO.
The new functional dressing, fabricated with a cost-effective and
easy method, not only showed excellent antibacterial activity but
could also accelerate wound healing.
Alginate (Alg) and bacterial nanocellulose (BNC) have exhibited great potential in biomedical applications, especially wound dressing. Non-toxicity and a moisture-maintaining nature are common features making them favorable for functional dressing fabrication. BNC is a natural biopolymer that promotes major advances to the current and future biomedical materials, especially in a flat or tubular membrane form with excellent mechanical strength at hydrated state. The main drawback limiting wide applications of both BNC and Alg is the lack of antibacterial activity, furthermore, the inherent poor mechanical property of Alg leads to the requirement of a secondary dressing in clinical treatment. To fabricate composite dressings with antibacterial activity and better mechanical properties, sodium alginate was efficiently incorporated into the BNC matrix using a time-saving vacuum suction method followed by cross-linking through immersion in separate solutions of six cations (manganese, cobalt, copper, zinc, silver, and cerium). The results showed the fabricated composites had not only pH-responsive antibacterial activities but also improved mechanical properties, which are capable of acting as smart dressings. All composites showed non-toxicity toward fibroblast cells. Rat model evaluation showed the skin wounds covered by the dressings healed faster than by BNC.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.