Maltodextrin-amino acids electrospun scaffolds cross-linked with Maillard-type reaction for skin tissue engineering
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Chronic wounds Maltodextrin Amino acids Maillard-type reaction Mechanical properties Surface zeta potential Immune response Murine bum/excisional model
Fecha
2021-12-03Referencia bibliográfica
Marco Ruggeri... [et al.]. Maltodextrin-amino acids electrospun scaffolds cross-linked with Maillard-type reaction for skin tissue engineering, Biomaterials Advances, Volume 133, 2022, 112593, ISSN 2772-9508, [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.msec.2021.112593]
Patrocinador
Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme 814607Resumen
The goal of this work is the design and the development of scaffolds based on maltodextrin (MD) to recover chronic
lesions. MD was mixed with arginine/lysine/polylysine and the electrospinning was successfully used to prepare scaffolds
with uniform and continuous nanofibers having regular shape and smooth surface. A thermal treatment was applied
to obtain insoluble scaffolds in aqueous environment, taking the advantage of amino acids-polysaccharide
conjugates formed via Maillard-type reaction. The morphological analysis showed that the scaffolds had nanofibrous
structures, and that the cross-linking by heating did not significantly change the nanofibers' dimensions and did not
alter the systemstability. Moreover, the heating process caused a reduction of free amino group and proportionally increased
scaffold cross-linking degree. The scaffolds were elastic and resistant to break, and possessed negative zeta potential
in physiological fluids. These were characterized by direct antioxidant properties and Fe2+ chelation capability
(indirect antioxidant properties). Moreover, the scaffolds were cytocompatible towards fibroblasts and monocytesderived
macrophages, and did not show any significant pro-inflammatory activity. Finally, those proved to accelerate
the recovery of the burn/excisional wounds. Considering all the features, MD-poly/amino acids scaffolds could be considered
as promising medical devices for the treatment of chronic wounds.