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Fabrication of Bio-Based Gelatin Sponge for Potential Use as A Functional Acellular Skin Substitute

Gelatin possesses biological properties that resemble native skin and can potentially be fabricated as a skin substitute for full-thickness wound treatment. The native property of gelatin, whereby it is easily melted and degraded at body temperature, could prevent its biofunctionality for various ap...

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Autores principales: Arif, Mior Muhammad Amirul, Fauzi, Mh Busra, Nordin, Abid, Hiraoka, Yosuke, Tabata, Yasuhiko, Yunus, Mohd Heikal Mohd
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7697907/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33202700
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym12112678
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author Arif, Mior Muhammad Amirul
Fauzi, Mh Busra
Nordin, Abid
Hiraoka, Yosuke
Tabata, Yasuhiko
Yunus, Mohd Heikal Mohd
author_facet Arif, Mior Muhammad Amirul
Fauzi, Mh Busra
Nordin, Abid
Hiraoka, Yosuke
Tabata, Yasuhiko
Yunus, Mohd Heikal Mohd
author_sort Arif, Mior Muhammad Amirul
collection PubMed
description Gelatin possesses biological properties that resemble native skin and can potentially be fabricated as a skin substitute for full-thickness wound treatment. The native property of gelatin, whereby it is easily melted and degraded at body temperature, could prevent its biofunctionality for various applications. This study aimed to fabricate and characterise buffalo gelatin (Infanca halal certified) crosslinked with chemical type crosslinker (genipin and genipin fortified with EDC) and physicaly crosslink using the dihydrothermal (DHT) method. A porous gelatin sponge (GS) was fabricated by a freeze-drying process followed by a complete crosslinking via chemical—natural and synthetic—or physical intervention using genipin (GNP), 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl) (EDC) and dihydrothermal (DHT) methods, respectively. The physicochemical, biomechanical, cellular biocompatibility and cell-biomaterial interaction of GS towards human epidermal keratinocytes (HEK) and dermal fibroblasts (HDF) were evaluated. Results showed that GS had a uniform porous structure with pore size ranging between 60 and 200 µm with high porosity (>78.6 ± 4.1%), high wettability (<72.2 ± 7.0°), high tensile strain (>13.65 ± 1.10%) and 14 h of degradation rate. An increase in the concentration and double-crosslinking approach demonstrated an increment in the crosslinking degree, enzymatic hydrolysis resistance, thermal stability, porosity, wettability and mechanical strength. The GS can be tuned differently from the control by approaching the GS via a different crosslinking strategy. However, a decreasing trend was observed in the pore size, water retention and water absorption ability. Crosslinking with DHT resulted in large pore sizes (85–300 µm) and low water retention (236.9 ± 18.7 g/m(2)·day) and a comparable swelling ratio with the control (89.6 ± 7.1%). Moreover no changes in the chemical content and amorphous phase identification were observed. The HEK and HDF revealed slight toxicity with double crosslinking. HEK and HDF attachment and proliferation remain similar to each crosslinking approach. Immunogenicity was observed to be higher in the double-crosslinking compared to the single-crosslinking intervention. The fabricated GS demonstrated a dynamic potential to be tailored according to wound types by manipulating the crosslinking intervention.
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spelling pubmed-76979072020-11-29 Fabrication of Bio-Based Gelatin Sponge for Potential Use as A Functional Acellular Skin Substitute Arif, Mior Muhammad Amirul Fauzi, Mh Busra Nordin, Abid Hiraoka, Yosuke Tabata, Yasuhiko Yunus, Mohd Heikal Mohd Polymers (Basel) Article Gelatin possesses biological properties that resemble native skin and can potentially be fabricated as a skin substitute for full-thickness wound treatment. The native property of gelatin, whereby it is easily melted and degraded at body temperature, could prevent its biofunctionality for various applications. This study aimed to fabricate and characterise buffalo gelatin (Infanca halal certified) crosslinked with chemical type crosslinker (genipin and genipin fortified with EDC) and physicaly crosslink using the dihydrothermal (DHT) method. A porous gelatin sponge (GS) was fabricated by a freeze-drying process followed by a complete crosslinking via chemical—natural and synthetic—or physical intervention using genipin (GNP), 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl) (EDC) and dihydrothermal (DHT) methods, respectively. The physicochemical, biomechanical, cellular biocompatibility and cell-biomaterial interaction of GS towards human epidermal keratinocytes (HEK) and dermal fibroblasts (HDF) were evaluated. Results showed that GS had a uniform porous structure with pore size ranging between 60 and 200 µm with high porosity (>78.6 ± 4.1%), high wettability (<72.2 ± 7.0°), high tensile strain (>13.65 ± 1.10%) and 14 h of degradation rate. An increase in the concentration and double-crosslinking approach demonstrated an increment in the crosslinking degree, enzymatic hydrolysis resistance, thermal stability, porosity, wettability and mechanical strength. The GS can be tuned differently from the control by approaching the GS via a different crosslinking strategy. However, a decreasing trend was observed in the pore size, water retention and water absorption ability. Crosslinking with DHT resulted in large pore sizes (85–300 µm) and low water retention (236.9 ± 18.7 g/m(2)·day) and a comparable swelling ratio with the control (89.6 ± 7.1%). Moreover no changes in the chemical content and amorphous phase identification were observed. The HEK and HDF revealed slight toxicity with double crosslinking. HEK and HDF attachment and proliferation remain similar to each crosslinking approach. Immunogenicity was observed to be higher in the double-crosslinking compared to the single-crosslinking intervention. The fabricated GS demonstrated a dynamic potential to be tailored according to wound types by manipulating the crosslinking intervention. MDPI 2020-11-13 /pmc/articles/PMC7697907/ /pubmed/33202700 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym12112678 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Arif, Mior Muhammad Amirul
Fauzi, Mh Busra
Nordin, Abid
Hiraoka, Yosuke
Tabata, Yasuhiko
Yunus, Mohd Heikal Mohd
Fabrication of Bio-Based Gelatin Sponge for Potential Use as A Functional Acellular Skin Substitute
title Fabrication of Bio-Based Gelatin Sponge for Potential Use as A Functional Acellular Skin Substitute
title_full Fabrication of Bio-Based Gelatin Sponge for Potential Use as A Functional Acellular Skin Substitute
title_fullStr Fabrication of Bio-Based Gelatin Sponge for Potential Use as A Functional Acellular Skin Substitute
title_full_unstemmed Fabrication of Bio-Based Gelatin Sponge for Potential Use as A Functional Acellular Skin Substitute
title_short Fabrication of Bio-Based Gelatin Sponge for Potential Use as A Functional Acellular Skin Substitute
title_sort fabrication of bio-based gelatin sponge for potential use as a functional acellular skin substitute
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7697907/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33202700
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym12112678
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