Pharmaceutical Biology (Jan 2021)

Bioadhesive hydrogel comprising bilirubin/β-cyclodextrin inclusion complexes promote diabetic wound healing

  • Qing Yao,
  • Yannan Shi,
  • Xing Xia,
  • Yingying Tang,
  • Xue Jiang,
  • Ya-Wen Zheng,
  • Hailin Zhang,
  • Ruijie Chen,
  • Longfa Kou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/13880209.2021.1964543
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 59, no. 1
pp. 1139 – 1149

Abstract

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Context Chronic non-healing diabetic wound therapy is an important clinical challenge. Manipulating the release of bioactive factors from an adhesive hydrogel is an effective approach to repair chronic wounds. As an endogenous antioxidant, bilirubin (BR) has been shown to promote wound healing. Nonetheless, its application is limited by its low water solubility and oxidative degradation. Objective This study developed a bilirubin-based formulation for diabetic wound healing. Materials and methods Bilirubin was incorporated into β-CD-based inclusion complex (BR/β-CD) which was then loaded into a bioadhesive hydrogel matrix (BR/β-CD/SGP). Scratch wound assays were performed to examine the in vitro pro-healing activity of BR/β-CD/SGP (25 μg/mL of BR). Wounds of diabetic or non-diabetic rats were covered with BR or BR/β-CD/SGP hydrogels (1 mg/mL of BR) and changed every day for a period of 7 or 21 days. Histological assays were conducted to evaluate the in vivo effect of BR/β-CD/SGP. Results Compared to untreated (18.7%) and BR (55.2%) groups, wound closure was more pronounced (65.0%) in BR/β-CD/SGP group. In diabetic rats, the wound length in BR/β-CD/SGP group was smaller throughout the experimental period than untreated groups. Moreover, BR/β-CD/SGP decreased TNF-α levels to 7.7% on day 3, and elevated collagen deposition and VEGF expression to 11.9- and 8.2-fold on day 14. The therapeutic effects of BR/β-CD/SGP were much better than those of the BR group. Similar observations were made in the non-diabetic model. Discussion and conclusion BR/β-CD/SGP promotes wound healing and tissue remodelling in both diabetic and non-diabetic rats, indicating an ideal wound-dressing agent.

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