Shuwei Nie , Manru Wang , Zixuan Wang , Hang Yu , Zhuoyuan Li , Zhiqi Yang , Hongxiang Liu , Zheng Liu , Hongxia Ma , Xin Liu , Rui Chen , Yan Cheng
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Polypyrrole modified hFGF2-oil bodies for postsurgical melanoma recurrence suppression and wound healing acceleration
Surgical treatment is the primary method for treating malignant melanoma at present. However, tumor recurrence after surgery and difficulty in wound healing remain significant challenges. This study designed and constructed a therapeutic wound dressing by loading polypyrrole (PPy) into human fibroblast growth factor 2 (hFGF2) covalently bonded camelina oil bodies (h-OB) to form Ph-OB. In a postoperative B16F10 melanoma model in C57BL/6 mice, the photothermal properties of PPy were utilized to increase the temperature at the surgical wound site through near-infrared light irradiation, performing photothermal therapy to kill residual tumors and inhibit tumor recurrence. Meanwhile, the release of hFGF2 from the Ph-OB acts on the postoperative wound site, promotes fibroblast proliferation and migration to accelerate wound healing. In summary, the developed Ph-OB not only prevents tumor recurrence but also facilitates the healing of surgery-induced wounds, showing great potential in postoperative cancer treatment.
期刊介绍:
Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces is an international journal devoted to fundamental and applied research on colloid and interfacial phenomena in relation to systems of biological origin, having particular relevance to the medical, pharmaceutical, biotechnological, food and cosmetic fields.
Submissions that: (1) deal solely with biological phenomena and do not describe the physico-chemical or colloid-chemical background and/or mechanism of the phenomena, and (2) deal solely with colloid/interfacial phenomena and do not have appropriate biological content or relevance, are outside the scope of the journal and will not be considered for publication.
The journal publishes regular research papers, reviews, short communications and invited perspective articles, called BioInterface Perspectives. The BioInterface Perspective provide researchers the opportunity to review their own work, as well as provide insight into the work of others that inspired and influenced the author. Regular articles should have a maximum total length of 6,000 words. In addition, a (combined) maximum of 8 normal-sized figures and/or tables is allowed (so for instance 3 tables and 5 figures). For multiple-panel figures each set of two panels equates to one figure. Short communications should not exceed half of the above. It is required to give on the article cover page a short statistical summary of the article listing the total number of words and tables/figures.