Microparticles decorated with cell-instructive surface chemistries actively promote wound healing

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Publication date
2022-12-01Creators
Ghaemmaghami, Amir
Alexander, Morgan
Irvine, Derek
Metadata
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Wound healing is a complex biological process involving close crosstalk between various cell types. Dysregulation in any of these processes, such as in diabetic wounds, results in chronic non-healing wounds. Fibroblasts are a critical cell type involved in wound healing. We screened 315 different polymer surfaces to identify candidates which actively drove fibroblasts towards either pro- or anti-proliferative functional phenotypes. Fibroblast-instructive chemistries were identified, which we synthesized into surfactants to fabricate easy to administer microparticles for direct application to diabetic wounds. The pro-proliferative microfluidic derived particles were able to successfully promote neovascularisation, granulation tissue formation and wound closure after a single application to the wound bed. The data within this collection is associated with in vitro and in vivo assays carried out within the manuscript.
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Subjects
- Wound healing
- Fibroblasts
- Surface active agents
- cell-instructive surface chemistries, fibroblast modulation, microparticle production, wound healing, surfactants
- Subjects Allied to Medicine::Medical technology::Medical technology not elsewhere classified
- R Medicine::R Medicine (General)::R855 Medical technology. Biomedical engineering. Electronics
Divisions
- University of Nottingham, UK Campus::Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences::School of Life Sciences
Deposit date
2022-11-18Alternative title
- Wound healing microparticles
Corporate creators
- CicaBiomedical
Data type
Raw data for laboratory based experimentsContributors
- Latif, Arsalan
- Fisher, Leanne
- Dundas, Adam
Funders
- Engineering & Physical Sciences Research Council
Grant number
- EP/N006615/1
Data collection method
Data collection protocolResource languages
- en_US