Adipose‐Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cell‐Derived Exosomes Biopotentiated Extracellular Matrix Hydrogels Accelerate Diabetic Wound Healing and Skin Regeneration

Yanling Song(Zhejiang University), Yuchan You(Zhejiang University), Xinyi Xu(Zhejiang Shuren University), Xinyi Xu(Zhejiang Shuren University), Jingyi Lu(Zhejiang University), Xiajie Huang(Zhejiang University), Jucong Zhang(Zhejiang University), Luwen Zhu(Zhejiang University), Jiahao Hu(Zhejiang University), Xiaochuan Wu(Zhejiang Shuren University), Xiaoling Xu(Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital), Xiaoling Xu(Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital), Wei‐Qiang Tan(Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital), Yongzhong Du(Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital)
Advanced Science
September 15, 2023
Cited by 243Open Access
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Abstract

Wound healing is an urgent clinical challenge, particularly in the case of chronic wounds. Traditional approaches to wound healing have limited therapeutic efficacy due to lengthy healing times, risk of immune rejection, and susceptibility to infection. Recently, adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cell-derived exosomes (ADSC-exos) have emerged as a promising modality for tissue regeneration and wound repair. In this study, the development of a novel extracellular matrix hydrogel@exosomes (ECM@exo) is reported, which entails incorporation of ADSC-exos into an extracellular matrix hydrogel (ECM hydrogel). This solution forms a hydrogel at physiological temperature (≈37 °C) upon local injection into the wound site. ECM@exo enables sustained release of ADSC-exos from the ECM hydrogel, which maintains high local concentrations at the wound site. The ECM hydrogel displays good biocompatibility and biodegradability. The in vivo and in vitro results demonstrate that ECM@exo treatment effectively reduces inflammation and promotes angiogenesis, collagen deposition, cell proliferation, and migration, thereby accelerating the wound healing process. Overall, this innovative therapeutic approach offers a new avenue for wound healing via a biological hydrogel with controlled exosome release.


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