posted on 2025-01-17, 09:29authored byMina Shahriari-Khalaji, Mamoona Sattar, Huidan Wei, Mastafa H. Al-Musawi, Yahiya Ibrahim Yahiya, Sumyah Hasan Torki, Shengyuan Yang, Mohamadreza Tavakoli, Marjan Mirhaj
Burns carry a large surface area, varying in shapes and
depths,
and an elevated risk of infection. Regardless of the underlying etiology,
burns pose significant medical challenges and a high mortality rate.
Given the limitations of current therapies, tissue-engineering-based
treatments for burns are inevitable. Herein, we developed a natural
physicochemically cross-linked adhesive injectable skin substitute
(SS) comprising chitosan (Ch) and silk fibroin (SF), cross-linked
with tannic acid (TA) through hydrogen bonding, and incorporated with
fresh platelet-rich fibrin (FPRF). SF was also chimerically cross-linked
with riboflavin (RF) under visible light to ensure desirable biodegradability
rate and nontoxicity. Double cross-linked SS exhibited a semibilayer
(SBSS) structure with smaller pores in the upper layer. In the CaCl2-treated FPRF, the activated platelets augmented vascular
endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and platelet-derived GF (PDGF) release.
The resultant SBSS possessed optimal adhesion, hemocompatibility,
and significant antibacterial and antioxidant activities (P ≤ 0.05). The rat liver injury model confirmed the
rapid hemostatic effect of SBSS. Furthermore, the bottom layer of
SBSS promoted L929 fibroblast growth, proliferation, and migration.
SBSS-treated wounds showed lower inflammatory cells, earlier epithelialization,
significant angiogenesis, and faster healing. The proposed SBSS could
be an ideal remedy for burn wound therapy.