Abstract

Bacterial cellulose (BC) is a promising material for use as an artificial skin in wound healing application, however, its applications are limited due to its poor malleability. Incorporating non-cellulosic polysaccharides such as dextran and xyloglucan (XG) may enhance its respective wound healing and malleability. This study presents a novel in situ biopreparation method to produce BC-based hybrid hydrogels containing dextran (BC-D) and xyloglucan-dextran (BC-XG-D) with unique mechanical and rheological properties. Structural analysis revealed that dextran of different sizes (10 k, 70 k and 2 M of Mw) form micron-sized particles by loosely binding to cellulosic fibres. The addition of xyloglucan resulted acts as a lubricant in mechanical testing. The BC-XG-D hybrid hydrogels showed a reduced Young's modulus of 4 MPa and a higher maximum tensile strain of 53 % compared to native BC. Moreover, they displayed less plastic but more viscous behaviour under large shear strain deformation. The wound healing animal model experiments demonstrated that the BC-XG-D hybrid hydrogels promoted wound healing process and skin maturation. Overall, these findings contribute to the development of functional BC-based medical materials with desired mechanical and rheological properties that have the potential to accelerate wound healing.

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