Plant Extracellular Nanovesicle-Loaded Hydrogel for
Topical Antibacterial Wound Healing In Vivo
Posted on 2024-10-08 - 12:36
Bacterial
infections impede wound healing and pose significant
challenges in clinical care. There is an immediate need for safe and
targeted antivirulence agents to fight bacterial infections effectively.
In this regard, bioderived nanovesicles have shown significant promise.
This work demonstrated significant antibacterial properties of extracellular
nanovesicles derived from plant (mint) leaf juice (MENV). A hydrogel
(HG) was developed using oxidized alginate and chitosan and loaded
with antibacterial MENVs (MENV-HG). This formulation was investigated
for topical HG dressings to treat Gram-positive Micrococcus
luteus and Gram-negative Escherichia
coli-invasive wounds. The developed HG was injectable,
biocompatible (>95% cell was viable), nonhemolytic (<5% hemolytic
capacity), self-healing and exhibited strong physical and mechanical
interactions with the bacteria cells (MENV-HG-treated bacteria were
significantly more elastic compared to the control in both M. luteus (1.01 ± 0.3 MPa, p < 0.005 vs 5.03 ± 2.6) and E. coli (5.81 ± 2.1 MPa vs 10.81 ± 3.8, p <
0.005). MENV-HG was topically applied on wounds with a slow MENV release
profile, ensuring effective healing. These in vivo results demonstrated decreased inflammation and expedited healing
within 10 days of treatment (wound area closure was 99% with MENV-HG
treatment and 87% for control). Taken together, MENV-HGs have the
potential for a scalable and sustainable wound dressing strategy that
works satisfactorily for bacteria-infected wound healing and to be
validated in clinical trials.