A Degradable Bioelectronic Scaffold for Localized Cell Transfection toward Enhancing Wound Healing in a 3D Space

Author:

Xiao Ao1,Jiang Xinran1,Hu Yongyan2,Li Hu3,Jiao Yanli3,Yin Dedong14,Wang Yuqiong1,Sun Hong5,Wu Han1ORCID,Lin Long1,Chang Tianrui1,Liu Feng1,Yang Kuan1,Huang Zhaocun1,Sun Yanan6,Zhai Penghua17,Fu Yao17,Kong Shenshen2,Mu Wei17,Wang Yi5,Yu Xinge3ORCID,Chang Lingqian1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Beijing Advanced Innovation Center for Biomedical Engineering School of Biological Science and Medical Engineering Beihang University Beijing 100191 China

2. Laboratory Animal Center Peking University First Hospital Beijing 100034 China

3. Department of Biomedical Engineering City University of Hong Kong Kowloon Hong Kong 999077 China

4. Department of Cell Biology National Research Institute for Family Planning Beijing 100081 China

5. Translational Medicine Center Beijing Chest Hospital Capital Medical University Beijing 101149 China

6. Experimental Research Center China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences Beijing 100091 China

7. School of Engineering Medicine Key Laboratory of Big Data‐Based Precision Medicine (Beihang University) Ministry of Industry and Information Technology of the People's Republic of China Beijing 100191 China

Abstract

AbstractLarge skin wounds, with extensive surface area and deep vertical full‐thickness involvement, can pose significant challenges in clinical settings. Traditional routes for repairing skin wounds encompass three hallmarks: 1) scab formation for hemostasis; 2) proliferation and migration of epidermal cells for wound closure; 3) proliferation, migration, and functionalization of fibroblasts and endothelial cells for dermal remodeling. However, this route face remarkable challenges to healing large wounds, usually leading to disordered structures and loss of functions in the regenerated skin, due to limited control on the transition among the three stages. In this work, an implantable bioelectronics is developed that enables the synchronization of the three stages, offering accelerated and high‐quality healing of large skin wounds. The system efficiently electro‐transfect local cells near the wounds, forcing cellular proliferation, while providing a 3D porous environments for synchronized migration of epidermal and dermal cells. In vivo experiments demonstrated that the system achieved synchronous progression of multiple layers within the wounds, leading to the reconstruction of a complete skin structure similar to healthy skin, which presents a new avenue for the clinical translation of large wound healing.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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