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Microenvironment-responsive MOF nanozymes armored cryogels promoted wound healing via rapid hemostasis, infection elimination and angiogenesis.

Fupeng Li, Yun Du, Yumeng Zheng, Yihao Liu, Xinchen Zhu et al.
Other Journal of controlled release : official journal of the Controlled Release Society 2025 16 citations
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Study Type
In Vitro
Population
Diabetic wound animal model
Intervention
Microenvironment-responsive MOF nanozymes armored cryogels promoted wound healing via rapid hemostasis, infection elimination and angiogenesis. None
Comparator
None
Primary Outcome
Diabetic wound healing
Effect Direction
Positive
Risk of Bias
Unclear

Abstract

Drug-resistant bacterial and biofilm infections, vascularization disorders, and inadequate hemostasis are the key factors that limit chronic diabetic wound healing. Here, we construct a microenvironment-responsive multifunctional platinum-armed iron-based MOF nanocomposite (Pt@FeMOF) to repair chronic wounds. Under acidic conditions (biofilm environment), Pt@FeMOF nanoparticles (NPs) produce reactive oxygen species via a synergistic Fenton reaction to eliminate both drug-resistant bacteria and their biofilms. Furthermore, based on transcriptomic results and ferroptosis marker evaluation, we reveal that the Pt@FeMOF NPs induce ferroptosis in bacteria via lipid peroxidation, GSH depletion, iron overload, and disruption of arginine metabolism. In addition, the Pt@FeMOF NPs promote vascular repair, possibly by inhibiting oxidative stress-mediated endothelial cell senescence in the microenvironment to restore angiogenesis. Finally, the Pt@FeMOF NPs are loaded into GelMA cryogels to further improve their hemostasis and exudate absorption. In vivo experiments demonstrate that Pt@FeMOF NPs-loaded cryogel dressings effectively promote MRSA- and P. aeruginosa-infected diabetic wounds. This ferroptosis-like antibacterial strategy may provide novel insights into the treatment of drug-resistant bacterial infections and fight against biofilm-associated infections. The proposed tactic provides a promising approach for the clinical treatment of diabetic wounds.

TL;DR

A microenvironment-responsive multifunctional platinum-armed iron-based MOF nanocomposite (Pt@FeMOF) to repair chronic wounds and induces ferroptosis in bacteria via lipid peroxidation, GSH depletion, iron overload, and disruption of arginine metabolism.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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