A Whole-Course-Repair System Based on Neurogenesis-Angiogenesis Crosstalk and Macrophage Reprogramming Promotes Diabetic Wound Healing

  • Yuan Xiong
  • , Ze Lin
  • , Pengzhen Bu
  • , Tao Yu
  • , Yori Endo
  • , Wu Zhou
  • , Yun Sun
  • , Faqi Cao
  • , Guandong Dai
  • , Yiqiang Hu
  • , Li Lu
  • , Lang Chen
  • , Peng Cheng
  • , Kangkang Zha
  • , Mohammad Ali Shahbazi*
  • , Qian Feng*
  • , Bobin Mi*
  • , Guohui Liu*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    289 Citations (Scopus)
    146 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    Diabetic wound (DW) therapy is currently a big challenge in medicine and strategies to enhance neurogenesis and angiogenesis have appeared to be a promising direction. However, the current treatments have failed to coordinate neurogenesis and angiogenesis simultaneously, leading to an increased disability rate caused by DWs. Herein, a whole-course-repair system is introduced by a hydrogel to concurrently achieve a mutually supportive cycle of neurogenesis-angiogenesis under a favorable immune-microenvironment. This hydrogel can first be one-step packaged in a syringe for later in situ local injections to cover wounds long-termly for accelerated wound healing via the synergistic effect of magnesium ions (Mg2+) and engineered small extracellular vesicles (sEVs). The self-healing and bio-adhesive properties of the hydrogel make it an ideal physical barrier for DWs. At the inflammation stage, the formulation can recruit bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells to the wound sites and stimulate them toward neurogenic differentiation, while providing a favorable immune microenvironment via macrophage reprogramming. At the proliferation stage of wound repair, robust angiogenesis occurs by the synergistic effect of the newly differentiated neural cells and the released Mg2+, allowing a regenerative neurogenesis-angiogenesis cycle to take place at the wound site. This whole-course-repair system provides a novel platform for combined DW therapy.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number2212300
    Number of pages14
    JournalAdvanced materials
    Volume35
    Issue number19
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 11-May-2023

    Keywords

    • angiogenesis
    • diabetic wounds
    • hydrogels
    • macrophages
    • neurogenesis

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