Decellularization of porcine dermis via supercritical CO2-assisted co-solvent system for cutaneous wound healing
Xiaochang Lu, Biaoqi Chen, Ying Fang, Jiutao Cao, Rui Huang, Ranjith Kumar Kankala, Shibin Wang, Aizheng Chen

TL;DR
A new method using supercritical CO2 helps create better bioactive scaffolds for healing skin wounds.
Contribution
A novel scCO2-assisted co-solvent system for decellularization that preserves bioactivity and mechanical properties.
Findings
scCO2-derived ADM showed enhanced bioactive component retention and better mechanical properties.
In vitro tests showed good biocompatibility with L929 cells and minimal cytotoxicity.
In mice, the ADM accelerated wound healing and improved collagen and angiogenesis.
Abstract
Efficient generation of bioactive and structurally preserved decellularized extracellular matrix (dECM) is critical for regenerative medicine applications. Conventional decellularization techniques, however, frequently utilize detergents such as sodium dodecyl sulfate and Triton X-100, which may compromise ECM integrity, diminish retention of bioactive components and impair mechanical properties. To address these limitations, we present a supercritical CO2 (scCO2)-assisted co-solvent strategy for efficient decellularization of porcine dermis, yielding a bioactive acellular dermal matrix (ADM) patch with high clinical potential in cutaneous wound healing. Porcine dermal sheets were first subjected to scCO2-ethanol co-solvent treatment (28 MPa, 40°C, 6 h) followed by rapid depressurization. The solvent system was then switched to scCO2-water co-solvent with concurrent ultrasonic washing.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine · Wound Healing and Treatments · Mesenchymal stem cell research
