Ramezani Maryam, Monroe Mary Beth Browning
Department of Biomedical and Chemical Engineering and Bioinspired Syracuse: Institute for Material and Living Systems, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York, USA.
J Biomed Mater Res A. 2023 Jul;111(7):921-937. doi: 10.1002/jbm.a.37527. Epub 2023 Mar 4.
Chronic wound healing is often negatively impacted by infection. Efficient infection assessment is crucial for effective treatment, and biofilm inhibition could improve treatment efficacy. To that end, we developed a bacterial protease-responsive shape memory polymer based on a segmented polyurethane with incorporated poly(glutamic acid) peptide (PU-Pep). Poly(glutamic acid) degrades in response to bacterial proteases to trigger shape recovery of PU-Pep films that are programmed into a secondary shape. These materials have transition temperatures well above body temperature (60°C), which enables stable storage in temporary shapes after implantation. Synthesized polymers have high shape fixity (74%-88%), shape recovery (93%-95%), and cytocompatibility (100%). Strained PU-Pep samples underwent shape recovery within ≤24 h in response to the V8 enzyme from Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus, 50% recovery) and multiple bacteria strains (S. aureus [40%], Staphylococcus epidermidis [30%], and Escherichia coli [25%]), and they had minimal shape change in response to media controls and mammalian cells. Shape recovery of strained PU-Pep samples prevented biofilm formation on the sample surfaces, and resulting attached planktonic bacteria were vulnerable to applied treatments. PU-Pep with physically incorporated antimicrobials simultaneously prevented biofilm formation and killed isolated bacteria. PU-Pep dressings displayed visible shape change and resistance to biofilm formation in in vitro and ex vivo models. In the in vitro model, PU-Pep shape change also disrupted pre-formed biofilm structures. This novel bacterial protease-responsive biomaterial could serve as a wound dressing that changes shape specifically during bacterial colonization to alert clinicians to infection and make biofilm-associated infections easier to treat.
慢性伤口愈合常常受到感染的负面影响。有效的感染评估对于有效治疗至关重要,而生物膜抑制可提高治疗效果。为此,我们基于一种含有聚(谷氨酸)肽(PU-Pep)的嵌段聚氨酯开发了一种细菌蛋白酶响应形状记忆聚合物。聚(谷氨酸)会响应细菌蛋白酶而降解,从而触发被编程为二级形状的PU-Pep薄膜的形状恢复。这些材料的转变温度远高于体温(约60°C),这使得它们在植入后能够以临时形状稳定储存。合成聚合物具有较高的形状固定率(约74%-88%)、形状恢复率(约93%-95%)和细胞相容性(约100%)。应变的PU-Pep样品在≤24小时内对来自金黄色葡萄球菌的V8酶(金黄色葡萄球菌,约50%恢复)和多种细菌菌株(金黄色葡萄球菌[约40%]、表皮葡萄球菌[约30%]和大肠杆菌[约25%])做出形状恢复反应,并且它们对培养基对照和哺乳动物细胞的反应形状变化最小。应变的PU-Pep样品的形状恢复阻止了样品表面生物膜的形成,并且由此附着的浮游细菌容易受到应用处理的影响。物理掺入抗菌剂的PU-Pep同时防止了生物膜的形成并杀死了分离出的细菌。PU-Pep敷料在体外和离体模型中显示出明显的形状变化和对生物膜形成的抗性。在体外模型中,PU-Pep形状变化还破坏了预先形成的生物膜结构。这种新型的细菌蛋白酶响应生物材料可作为一种伤口敷料,在细菌定植期间特异性地改变形状,以提醒临床医生感染情况,并使生物膜相关感染更易于治疗。