Abstract

High glucose level, bacterial infection, and persistent inflammation within the microenvironment are key factors contributing to the delay of diabetic ulcers healing, while traditional therapeutic methods generally fail to address these issues simultaneously. Here, we present a spatiotemporally responsive cascade bilayer microneedle (MN) patch for accelerating diabetic wound healing via local glucose depletion and sustained nitric oxide (NO) release for long-term antibacterial and anti-inflammatory effects. The MN patch (G/AZ-MNs) possesses a degradable tip layer loading glucose oxidase (GOx), as well as a dissolvable base layer encapsulating l-arginine (Arg)-loaded nanoparticles (NPs). After wound administration, the base part rapidly dissolved, resulting in prompt separation of the MN tip within the wound tissue, which subsequently responded to the overexpressed matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) in diabetic lesions, leading to the responsive release of GOx. The released enzyme catalyzed glucose into gluconic acid and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), which not only reduced glucose level within the diabetic wound, but also initiated the cascade reaction between H2O2 with the Arg that was released from NPs, thereby achieving continuous production of NO for 7 days. Our findings demonstrate that a single administration of the MN patch could effectively heal non-infected or biofilm-infected diabetic wounds with the multifunctional properties.

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