Carbohydrate Polymer Technologies and Applications (Jun 2024)

Xanthan gum/Guar gum-based 3D-printed scaffolds for wound healing: production, characterization, and biocompatibility screening

  • Nicola Filippo Virzì,
  • Patricia Diaz-Rodriguez,
  • Angel Concheiro,
  • Valeria Pittalà,
  • Carmen Alvarez-Lorenzo

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7
p. 100523

Abstract

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Biodegradable and eco-sustainable medical devices represent an urgent need to face up to the increasing pollution associated to plastic device wastes. The present study aimed to develop semisolid extruded 3D (SSE-3D)-printed medical devices using mixtures of Xanthan gum (XG) and Guar gum (GG) as a green alternative to non-biodegradable synthetic polymers. The final purpose is to prepare biocompatible, biodegradable, and sterilizable implantable scaffolds with pro-regenerative and wound-healing properties. Inks prepared with 12 % w/v XG/GG (50:50) and blended with citric (CA), succinic (SA), or tartaric acid (TA) possessed suitable rheological profiles and allowed the 3D printing of porous scaffolds with high precision and structural control. Steam-heat sterilization triggered the cross-linking through ester bond formation (confirmed by ATR-FTIR and CP/MAS 13C-NMR). The scaffold crosslinked with SA had reproducible porosity (SEM and pycnometer), maintained the initial shape after 7 days swelling in PBS pH 7.4 and subjected to compression cycles (texturometer analysis), showed good cytocompatibility and hemocompatibility, and promoted angiogenesis in ovo in a chorioallantoic membrane model, evidencing tissue integration without toxicity. Furthermore, these scaffolds attenuated collagenase activity by trapping divalent ions (Ca2+ and Zn2+). Hence, by coupling angiogenic and anticollagenase activity, XG/GG scaffolds are promising candidates for wound healing and pro-regenerative applications.

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