Engineered Bicomponent Adhesives with Instantaneous and Superior Adhesion Performance for Wound Sealing and Healing Applications

  • Kelu Zhao
  • , Bo Li
  • , Yao Sun
  • , Bo Jia
  • , Jing Chen
  • , Wenhao Cheng
  • , Lai Zhao
  • , Jingjing Li
  • , Fan Wang
  • , Juanjuan Su
  • , Jing Sun
  • , Bing Han*
  • , Yawei Liu*
  • , Hongjie Zhang
  • , Kai Liu*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

33 Scopus citations

Abstract

Surgical adhesives are playing an important role in wound repair and emergency hemostasis in clinical treatment. However, the development of strong bioglue with rapid in situ adhesion, durable adhesiveness, and flexibility in dynamic and moist physiological environments is still challenging. Herein, a new type of biosynthetic protein bioadhesives with superior adhesion performance is reported by developing a protein aldimine condensation strategy. Lysine-rich recombinant proteins are designed and massively biosynthesized to instantaneously react with aldehyde cross-linkers to realize in situ strong adhesion. The obtained bioadhesives show an ultra-high adhesion strength of ≈101.6 kPa on porcine skin, outperforming extant clinical bioglues. In addition, they possess super biocompatibility, flexibility, biodegradability, and compliance with the tissues. Owing to the strong and instantaneous adhesion properties, the bioadhesives are qualified for dynamic wound closure, facilitating wound repair, and noncompressible hemorrhage. Importantly, they can be industrially encapsulated into custom-made cartridge delivery tubes at low cost for clinical use. Therefore, biosynthetic bioadhesives have great potential for biological applications and are capable of scaling up to the industrial level for clinical transformation, which will be a successful paradigm for reforming existing clinical products.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2303509
JournalAdvanced Functional Materials
Volume33
Issue number38
DOIs
StatePublished - 19 Sep 2023

Keywords

  • bioglues
  • cross-linkings
  • interfacial adhesions
  • protein engineering
  • sealing and healing

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