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      Supramolecular Photothermal Cascade Nano‐Reactor Enables Photothermal Effect, Cascade Reaction, and In Situ Hydrogelation for Biofilm‐Associated Tooth‐Extraction Wound Healing

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          Abstract

          Due to the emergence of drug resistance in bacteria and biofilm protection, achieving a satisfactory therapeutic effect for bacteria‐infected open wounds with conventional measures is problematic. Here, a photothermal cascade nano‐reactor (CPNC@GOx‐Fe 2+) is constructed through a supramolecular strategy through hydrogen bonding and coordination interactions between chitosan‐modified palladium nano‐cube (CPNC), glucose oxidase (GOx), and ferrous iron (Fe 2+). CPNC@GOx‐Fe 2+ exhibits excellent photothermal effects and powers the GOx‐assisted cascade reaction to generate hydroxyl radicals, enabling photothermal and chemodynamic combination therapy against bacteria and biofilms. Further proteomics, metabolomics, and all‐atom simulation results indicate that the damage of the hydroxyl radical to the function and structure of the cell membrane and the thermal effect enhance the fluidity and inhomogeneity of the bacterial cell membrane, resulting in the synergistic antibacterial effect. In the biofilm‐associated tooth extraction wound model, the hydroxyl radical generated from the cascade reaction process can initiate the radical polymerization process to form a hydrogel in situ for wound protection. In vivo experiments confirm that synergistic antibacterial and wound protection can accelerate the healing of infected tooth‐extraction wounds without affecting the oral commensal microbiota. This study provides a way to propose a multifunctional supramolecular system for the treatment of open wound infection.

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          A rapid and sensitive method for the quantitation of microgram quantities of protein utilizing the principle of protein-dye binding

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            Antibacterial Hydrogels

            Abstract Antibacterial materials are recognized as important biomaterials due to their effective inhibition of bacterial infections. Hydrogels are 3D polymer networks crosslinked by either physical interactions or covalent bonds. Currently, hydrogels with an antibacterial function are a main focus in biomedical research. Many advanced antibacterial hydrogels are developed, each possessing unique qualities, namely high water swellability, high oxygen permeability, improved biocompatibility, ease of loading and releasing drugs, and structural diversity. Here, an overview of the structures, performances, mechanisms of action, loading and release behaviors, and applications of various antibacterial hydrogel formulations is provided. Furthermore, the prospects in biomedical research and clinical applications are predicted.
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              Photo-Inspired Antibacterial Activity and Wound Healing Acceleration by Hydrogel Embedded with Ag/Ag@AgCl/ZnO Nanostructures.

              Ag/Ag@AgCl/ZnO hybrid nanostructures are embedded in a hydrogel by a simple two-step technique. The Ag/Ag@AgCl nanostructures are assembled in the hydrogel via ultraviolet light chemical reduction followed by incorporation of ZnO nanostructures by NaOH precipitation. The hydrogel accelerates wound healing and exhibits high antibacterial efficiency against both Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus under visible light irradiation. The Ag/Ag@AgCl nanostructures enhance the photocatalytic and antibacterial activity of ZnO due to the enhancement of reactive oxygen species by visible light. This hydrogel system kills 95.95% of E. coli and 98.49% of S. aureus within 20 min upon exposure to simulated visible light, and rapid sterilization plays a crucial role in wound healing. In addition, this system provides controllable, sustained release of silver and zinc ions over a period of 21 days arising from the reversible swelling-shrinking transition of the hydrogel triggered by the changing pH value in the biological environment. About 90% Zn2+ release is observed in the acidic environment after 3 days, whereas only 10% Zn2+ release occurs in the neutral environment after 21 days. In vivo results show that release of Ag+ and Zn2+ stimulates the immune function to produce a large number of white blood cells and neutrophils (2-4 times more than the control), thereby producing the synergistic antibacterial effects and accelerated wound healing.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Advanced Materials
                Advanced Materials
                Wiley
                0935-9648
                1521-4095
                August 2023
                June 25 2023
                August 2023
                : 35
                : 31
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Joint Centre of Translational Medicine the First Affiliated Hospital of Wenzhou Medical University Wenzhou Institute University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Wenzhou Zhejiang 325001 China
                [2 ] Center of Materials Science and Optoelectronics Engineering College of Materials Science and Opto‐Electronic Technology University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing 100049 China
                [3 ] Department of Orthodontics School and Hospital of Stomatology Wenzhou Medical University Wenzhou Zhejiang 325027 China
                [4 ] Translational Medicine Laboratory The First Affiliated Hospital of Wenzhou Medical University Wenzhou Zhejiang 325035 China
                [5 ] Key Laboratory of Functional Polymer Materials of Ministry of Education Institute of Polymer Chemistry College of Chemistry Nankai University Tianjin 300071 China
                Article
                10.1002/adma.202301664
                37279172
                6e4ccb20-0c7e-424b-be92-50f8be9ba56a
                © 2023

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