Full‐thickness skin wounds, associated with deep burns or chronic wounds pose a major clinical problem. Herein, the development of in situ forming hydrogel using a natural silk fibroin (SF) biomaterial for treating burn wounds is reported. Blends of SF solutions isolated from Bombyx mori and Antheraea assama show inherent self‐assembly between silk proteins and lead to irreversible gelation at body temperature. Investigation of the gelation mechanism reveals crosslinking due to formation of β‐sheet structures as examined by X‐ray diffraction and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The SF hydrogel supports proliferation of primary human dermal fibroblasts and migration of keratinocytes comparable to collagen gel (Col) as examined under in vitro conditions. The SF hydrogel also provides an instructive and supportive matrix to the full‐thickness third‐degree burn wounds in vivo. A 3‐week comparative study with Col indicates that SF hydrogel not only promotes wound healing but also shows transitions from inflammation to proliferation stage as observed through the expression of TNF‐α and CD163 genes. Further, deposition and remodeling of collagen type I and III fibers suggests an enhanced overall tissue regeneration. Comparable results with Col demonstrate the SF hydrogel as an effective and inexpensive formulation toward a potential therapeutic approach for burn wound treatment.
Silk, a natural biopolymer, has been used clinically as suture material over thousands of years and has received much impetus for a plethora of biomedical applications in the last two decades. Silk protein isolated from both mulberry and nonmulberry silkworm varieties gained recognition as a potential biomaterial owing to its affordability and remarkable physicochemical properties. Molecular studies on the amino acid composition and conformation of silk proteins interpreted in the present review provide a critical understanding of the difference in crystallinity, hydrophobicity, and tensile strength among silkworm silk proteins. Meticulous silk fibroin (SF) isolation procedures and innovative processing techniques to fabricate gamut of two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) matrices including the latest 3D printed scaffolds have led SF for diverse biomedical applications. Crucial factors for clinical success of any biomaterial, including biocompatibility, immune response, and biodegradability, are discussed with particular emphasis on the lesser-known endemic nonmulberry silk varieties, which in recent years have gained considerable attention. The tunable biodegradation and bioresorbable attributes of SF enabled its use in drug delivery systems, thus proving it as an efficient and specific vehicle for controlled drug release and targeted drug delivery. Advancements in fabrication methodologies inspired biomedical researchers to develop SF-based in vitro tissue models mimicking the spatiotemporal arrangement and cellular distribution of native tissue. In vitro tissue models own a unique demand for studying tissue biology, cellular crosstalks, disease modeling, drug designing, and high throughput drug screening applications. Significant progress in silk biomaterial research has evolved into several silk-based healthcare products in the market. Insights of silk-based products assessed in the human clinical trials are presented in this review. Overall, the current review explores the paradigm of the silk structure–function relationship driving silk-based biomaterials toward tissue engineering, drug delivery systems, and in vitro tissue models.
Chronic cutaneous ulcers, a complex pathophysiological diabetic condition, represent a critical clinical challenge in the current diabetes mellitus pandemic. Consequently, there is a compelling need for bioactive dressings that can trigger healing processes for complete wound repair. Silk fibroin (SF), a natural protein polymer from mulberry and non-mulberry silkworms, has properties that support accelerated wound healing rate. SF from non-mulberry variety possesses additional cell-binding motifs (arginine, glycine, and aspartate), offering cell-material interactions. This study is aimed to investigate wound healing efficacy of dressings made up of various SF varieties blended with poly(vinyl alcohol) biopolymer in alloxan-induced diabetic rabbit model. The nanofibrous mats have been developed using electrospinning and functionalized with growth factors and LL-37 antimicrobial peptide for sustained delivery. Following post 14-day treatment, non-mulberry SF (NMSF)-based dressings healed the wounds faster, in comparison with their mulberry Bombyx mori SF, poly(vinyl alcohol), and control counterparts (p < .01). NMSF-based dressings also supported faster granulation tissue development, angiogenesis, and reepithelialization of wounds. Gene expression study of matrix metalloproteinases and collagen proteins affirmed higher extent of tissue remodelling during the repair process. Furthermore, there was organized extracellular matrix deposition (collagen type I, collagen type III, elastin, and reticulin) and higher wound breaking strength in NMSF compared with other groups after 4 weeks. These results validated the potential of NMSF-based bioactive dressings to regulate extracellular matrix deposition leading to faster and complete repair of chronic diabetic cutaneous wounds.
The global volume of skin damage or injuries has major healthcare implications and, accounts for about half of the world's annual expenditure in the healthcare sector. In the last two decades, tissue-engineered skin constructs have shown great promise in the treatment of various skin-related disorders such as deep burns and wounds. The treatment methods for skin replacement and repair have evolved from utilization of autologous epidermal sheets to more complex bilayered cutaneous tissue engineered skin substitutes. However, inadequate vascularization, lack of flexibility in drug/growth factors loading and inability to reconstitute skin appendages such as hair follicles limits their utilization for restoration of normal skin anatomy on a routine basis. Recent advancements in cutting-edge technology from stem cell biology, nanotechnology, and various vascularization strategies have provided a tremendous springboard for researchers in developing and manipulating tissue engineered skin substitutes for improved skin regeneration and wound healing. This review summarizes the overview of skin tissue engineering and wound healing. Herein, developments and challenges of various available biomaterials, cell sources and in vitro skin models (full thickness and wound healing models) in tissue-engineered skin research are discussed. Furthermore, central to the discussion is the inclusion of various innovative strategies starting from stem cells, nanotechnology, vascularization strategies, microfluidics to three dimensional (3D) bioprinting based strategies for generation of complex skin mimics. The review then moves on to highlight the future prospects of advanced construction strategies of these bioengineered skin constructs and their contribution to wound healing and skin regeneration on current practice.
Silk is considered to be a potential biomaterial for a wide number of biomedical applications. Silk fibroin (SF) can be retrieved in sufficient quantities from the cocoons produced by silkworms. While it is easy to formulate into scaffolds with favorable mechanical properties, the natural SF does not contain bioactive functions. Spider silk proteins, on the contrary, can be produced in fusion with bioactive protein domains, but the recombinant procedures are expensive, and large-scale production is challenging. We combine the two types of silk to fabricate affordable, functional tissue-engineered constructs for wound-healing applications. Nanofibrous mats and microporous scaffolds made of natural silkworm SF are used as a bulk material that are top-coated with the recombinant spider silk protein (4RepCT) in fusion with a cell-binding motif, antimicrobial peptides, and a growth factor. For this, the inherent silk properties are utilized to form interactions between the two silk types by self-assembly. The intended function, that is, improved cell adhesion, antimicrobial activity, and growth factor stimulation, could be demonstrated for the obtained functionalized silk mats. As a skin prototype, SF scaffolds coated with functionalized silk are cocultured with multiple cell types to demonstrate formation of a bilayered tissue construct with a keratinized epidermal layer under in vitro conditions. The encouraging results support this strategy of fabrication of an affordable bioactive SF-spider silk-based biomaterial for wound dressings and skin substitutes.
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