Zn<sup>2+</sup> Cross-Linked Alginate Carrying Hollow Silica Nanoparticles Loaded with RL-QN15 Peptides Provides Promising Treatment for Chronic Skin Wounds

Qin Pan(Kunming Medical University), Jing Tang(Kunming Medical University), Dandan Sun(Kunming Medical University), Ying Yang(Yunnan University), Naixin Liu(Kunming Medical University), Yilin Li(Kunming Medical University), Zhe Fu(Kunming Medical University), Yinglei Wang(Kunming Medical University), Yinglei Wang(Kunming Medical University), Chao Li(Kunming Medical University), Xiaojie Li(Kunming Medical University), Yue Zhang(Kunming Medical University), Yixiang Liu(Kunming Medical University), Siyu Wang(Kunming Medical University), Jun Sun(Kunming Medical University), Ziwei Deng(Kunming Medical University), Li He(Kunming Medical University), Ying Wang(Kunming Medical University), Ying Wang(Kunming Medical University), Xinwang Yang(Kunming Medical University)
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
June 22, 2022
Cited by 70

Abstract

Chronic and non-healing wounds pose a great challenge to clinical management and patients. Many studies have explored novel interventions against skin wounds, with bioactive peptides, nanoparticles, and hydrogels arousing considerable attention regarding their therapeutic potential. In this study, the prohealing peptide RL-QN15 was loaded into hollow silica nanoparticles (HSNs), with these HSN@RL-QN15 nanocomposites then combined with zinc alginate (ZA) gels to obtain HSN@RL-QN15/ZA hydrogel. The characteristics, biological properties, and safety profiles of the hydrogel composites were then evaluated. Results showed that the hydrogel had good porosity, hemocompatibility, biocompatibility, and broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity, with the slow release of loaded RL-QN15. Further analysis indicated that the hydrogel promoted skin cell proliferation and keratinocyte scratch repair, regulated angiogenesis, reduced inflammation, and accelerated re-epithelialization and granulation tissue formation, resulting in the rapid healing of both full-thickness skin wounds and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus biofilm-infected chronic wounds in mice. This peptide-based hydrogel provides a novel intervention for the treatment of chronic skin wounds and shows promise as a wound dressing in the field of tissue regeneration.


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