Bionic cooling skin accelerates healing and combats wound infections
· News-MedicalAs the global burden of infected wounds continues to rise-with over 300 million surgeries performed annually and postoperative infections affecting 5–20% of patients-conventional wound dressings face a critical limitation: no single product has successfully integrated protective function, wearing comfort, and efficient antibacterial activity. Now, researchers from The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, led by Professor Xungai Wang, Professor Shuo Shi, Professor Huiqun Zhou, and Professor Yang Ming, together with collaborators from City University of Hong Kong, Jiangnan University, and Zhejiang Sci-Tech University, have presented a breakthrough bionic wound dressing that bridges the gap between passive coverage and active healing.
Why this dressing matters
Traditional wound dressings typically force a trade-off between comfort and functionality. Gauze adheres to wounds and causes pain during changes; foam dressings are costly; hydrocolloid dressings are unsuitable for infected wounds. The novel bionic cooling skin overcomes this limitation by combining a hierarchical Janus nanofiber structure with visible light-responsive metal–organic frameworks (MOFs), simultaneously achieving passive thermal management, on-demand antibacterial action, and skin-like mechanical compatibility.
Innovative design and mechanism
The material is fabricated through a synergistic integration of solvent welding technology with single-sided Fe-modified zeolitic imidazolate framework-8 (Fe-ZIF8). Solvent welding creates robust physical bonding points between electrospun PVDF nanofibers, imparting tensile strength of ~21.6 MPa and failure strain of ~54%-mechanical properties closely matching natural human skin. The Janus architecture features a hydrophobic outer layer (water contact angle = 137°) that reflects sunlight and transmits mid-infrared radiation for passive cooling, while the hydrophilic inner layer (water contact angle = 72°) wicks moisture and anchors Fe20-ZIF8 nanoparticles for antibacterial function.
Outstanding performance
Mechanistic insights from gene analysis
Comprehensive RNA sequencing and qPCR analysis reveal that the bionic skin actively regulates wound repair at the genetic level. The dressing upregulates angiogenesis markers (Vcam1, Vegfd, Vegfb, Vegfc), cell migration genes (Cemip, Cemip2), and antimicrobial peptides (Cathelicidin, Hepcidin), while downregulating inflammatory factors (Ilrun, Madcam1, TNF-α). GO and KEGG enrichment analyses confirm significant activation of PI3K-Akt, HIF-1, and NF-kappa B signaling pathways, optimizing the wound microenvironment through antibacterial action, pro-angiogenesis, anti-inflammation, and antioxidation mechanisms. Histological assessment shows the most uniform collagen deposition (34.06 ± 8.29%) and optimal epidermal thickness (89.50 ± 13.60 μm)-nearly twice that of normal skin-indicating robust tissue regeneration without excessive scarring.
Applications and future outlook
This work establishes a new paradigm for intelligent wound management by demonstrating that structural biomimicry and functional material design can be seamlessly integrated. The bionic cooling skin not only advances our understanding of wound repair mechanisms through multi-omics analysis but also holds significant promise for next-generation biomedical materials combining thermal comfort, active infection control, and accelerated tissue regeneration.
Stay tuned for more groundbreaking research from this collaborative team at The Hong Kong Polytechnic University and their partners across Hong Kong and mainland China!
Source:
Shanghai Jiao Tong University Journal Center
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