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Fabrication and in vitro characterization of electrochemically compacted collagen/sulfated xylorhamnoglycuronan matrix for wound healing applications

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posted on 2024-11-16, 05:00 authored by Lingzhi Kang, Xiao LiuXiao Liu, Zhilian YueZhilian Yue, Zhi ChenZhi Chen, Christopher Baker, Pia Winberg, Gordon WallaceGordon Wallace
Skin autografts are in great demand due to injuries and disease, but there are challenges using live tissue sources, and synthetic tissue is still in its infancy. In this study, an electrocompaction method was applied to fabricate the densely packed and highly ordered collagen/sulfated xylorhamnoglycuronan (SXRGlu) scaffold which closely mimicked the major structure and components in natural skin tissue. The fabricated electrocompacted collagen/SXRGlu matrices (ECLCU) were characterized in terms of micromorphology, mechanical property, water uptake ability and degradability. The viability, proliferation and morphology of human dermal fibroblasts (HDFs) cells on the fabricated matrices were also evaluated. The results indicated that the electrocompaction process could promote HDFs proliferation and SXRGlu could improve the water uptake ability and matrices' stability against collagenase degradation, and support fibroblast spreading on the ECLCU matrices. Therefore, all these results suggest that the electrocompacted collagen/SXRGlu scaffold is a potential candidate as a dermal substitute with enhanced biostability and biocompatibility.

Funding

ARC Centre of Excellence for Electromaterials Science

Australian Research Council

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Citation

Kang, L., Liu, X., Yue, Z., Chen, Z., Baker, C., Winberg, P. C. & Wallace, G. G. (2018). Fabrication and in vitro characterization of electrochemically compacted collagen/sulfated xylorhamnoglycuronan matrix for wound healing applications. Polymers, 10 (4), 1-13.

Journal title

Polymers

Volume

10

Issue

4

Language

English

RIS ID

125933

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