Abstract

Chronic diabetic wounds represent the most common diabetes complication. Wound healing depends on scavenging reactive oxygen species (ROS), neovascularization, and controlling infection. A naturally derived gelatin-based hydrogel is biocompatible, biodegradable, does not promote inflammation, and can remove ROS, but strategies for developing a gelatin-based hydrogel currently require careful chemical modification of gelatin and time-consuming purification and post-crosslinking processing. Herein, a facile method of combining zirconium (Zr4+), gelatin, and quercetin (QCN) to generate an injectable gelatin-based hydrogel (QCN@Gel-Zr) for diabetic wound treatment was presented. Adding QCN improved the mechanical, injection, and adhesive performance of the Gel-Zr hydrogel and conferred antibacterial and free radical–scavenging abilities. These properties induced cellular proliferation and migration, protection against oxidative stress, and reduction in inflammatory expression. In vivo models of acute and chronic diabetic skin wounds were used to demonstrate biocompatibility and the ability of the gelatin hydrogels to promote wound healing. The histological analysis showed that the QCN@Gel–Zr hydrogel promoted angiogenesis, collagen deposition, and hair follicle regeneration with no detectable cytotoxicity. This study demonstrates the preparation of gelatin-based hydrogel with various flexible functions to address the complex biological requirements of diabetic wound repair.

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