Abstract

Bacterial nanocellulose has found applications in tissue engineering, in skin tissue repair, and in wound healing. Its large surface area enables the adsorption of various substances. Bacterial nanocellulose with adsorbed substances can serve as a substrate for drug-delivery of specific bioactive healing agents into wounds. In this study, we loaded a bacterial nanocellulose hydrogel with curcumin, i.e., an important anti-bacterial and healing agent, and its degradation products. These products were prepared by thermal decomposition of curcumin (DC) at a temperature of 180 °C (DC 180) or of 300 °C (DC 300). The main thermal decomposition products were tumerone, vanillin, and feruloylmethane. Curcumin and its degradation products were loaded into the bacterial nanocellulose by an autoclaving process. The increased temperature during autoclaving enhanced the solubility and the penetration of the agents into the nanocellulose. The aim of this study was to investigate the cytotoxicity and the antimicrobial activity of pure curcumin, its degradation products, and finally of bacterial nanocellulose loaded with these agents. In vitro tests performed on human dermal fibroblasts revealed that the degradation products of curcumin, i.e., DC 180 and DC 300, were more cytotoxic than pure curcumin. However, if DC 300 was loaded into nanocellulose, the cytotoxic effect was not as strong as in the case of DC 300 powder added into the culture medium. DC 300 was found to be the least soluble product in water, which probably resulted in the poor loading of this agent into the nanocellulose. Nanocellulose loaded with pure curcumin or DC 180 exhibited more antibacterial activity than pristine nanocellulose.

Highlights

  • Cellulose is the most abundant natural polymer

  • The bacterial nanocellulose consisted of randomly-oriented nanofibers

  • We investigated the behavior of the cells, in terms of their adhesion, morphology, and proliferation, cultivated on nanocellulose loaded with pure curcumin, decomposition of curcumin (DC) 180, and DC 300 powder in various concentrations for 3 and 7 days (Figure 7, Figure 8 and Figure S3)

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Summary

Introduction

Cellulose is the most abundant natural polymer. E.g., cotton and higher plants, have cellulose as their main component [1]. Cellulose has found application in various industrial and biotechnological fields due to its availability, low cost, non-toxicity, environmentally-friendly behavior, biodegradability, and thermal and chemical stability [2]. Cellulose, including nanocellulose, is usually obtained from natural sources such as plants, bacteria, algae, and animals (for a review, see [3]). Bacterial nanocellulose is deposited extracellularly by various aerobic Gram-negative bacteria. The Acetobacter or Gluconacetobacter genus is used due to their high yield production [4]. Bacterial cellulose is chemically identical to plant cellulose, consisting of a linear chain of several hundred to thousands of glucose units.

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