Multifunctional Electrospun Nanofiber/Hydrogel-based Pro-healing Bilayer Dressings as Next Generation Biomaterial for Skin Wound Care

Abstract

Infectious wounds present a significant challenge in healthcare due to the delay in wound healing and associated processes. Improper use of antibiotics makes this situation even worse due to antibiotic resistance. To meet the critical requirements of healing infectious wounds, we report a bilayer dressing (BL) that combines a hydrogel-based layer and an electrospun nanofiber-based layer together to mimic the dermal and epidermal architecture of normal skin. The bilayer dressing is fabricated by combining chitosan/gelatin nanofiber-based layer (NF) with ursodeoxycholic acid drug (UDC) and carbon dots (CDs) loaded hydrogel (UDC/CDs/H-Gel). Hydrogel is fabricated by Schiff base-based crosslinking of quaternized chitosan (QCS) and oxidized alginate (OA). The integration of NF with UDC/CDs/H-Gel leads to ~45% increment in tensile strength and ~48% increment in elongation at break. BL exhibits swelling of ~400% in 36 h, porosity of ~75%, and antioxidant activity of ~93%. Moreover, as compared to individual NF and hydrogel layer, BL shows good reactive oxygen species (ROS) scavenging behavior, hemocompatibility (~4.5% hemolysis), good hemostatic potential, enhanced cell proliferation ability (130% cell viability of L929 cells), and excellent antibacterial activity with 92% and 88% bactericidal efficacy against E. coli and S. aureus, respectively. Wound healing ability of BL is further evaluated via scratch assay demonstrating ~97% wound closure. Overall, BL possesses multifunctionality, and presents itself as a potential candidate for accelerated wound healing.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
07 Apr 2025
Accepted
15 Aug 2025
First published
16 Aug 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

J. Mater. Chem. B, 2025, Accepted Manuscript

Multifunctional Electrospun Nanofiber/Hydrogel-based Pro-healing Bilayer Dressings as Next Generation Biomaterial for Skin Wound Care

D. Bhardwaj, V. Chawla, V. Nandwani, Y. Thakur, Y. Singh and G. Agrawal, J. Mater. Chem. B, 2025, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5TB00800J

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