Isolation, Characterization and Biological Evaluation of Collagen from Rhizostoma pulmo Jellyfish from the Sea of Azov for Biomedical Applications
Oleg Kit, Sergey Golovin, Evgeniya Kirichenko, Alina Sereda, Yulia Gordeeva, Evgeniy Sadyrin, Andrey Nikolaev, Pavel Antipov, Aleksandr Logvinov, Maria Kaplya, Magomed Abdulkadyrov, Stanislav Rodkin

TL;DR
This paper explores collagen from Azov Sea jellyfish as a safe and sustainable material for biomedical uses like tissue engineering and wound healing.
Contribution
The study introduces Rhizostoma pulmo jellyfish collagen as a novel marine source with potential for biomedical applications.
Findings
Extracted collagen showed high yield (~26.2%) and a type I-like profile with α-, β-, and γ-components.
Collagen sponges supported 3D cell growth and tumor-cell dissemination in an in vitro breast carcinoma model.
Low endotoxin levels (0.461 EU/µL) and no cytotoxicity were observed in tested conditions.
Abstract
Collagen is a major extracellular-matrix protein widely used in regenerative medicine, yet conventional terrestrial sources raise biosafety and acceptability concerns, motivating the search for marine alternatives. This study evaluates the jellyfish Rhizostoma pulmo (R. pulmo) from the Azov Sea as a sustainable collagen source and assesses its suitability for biomedical materials. Acid-soluble collagen was extracted using 0.5 M acetic acid and purified by salt precipitation and dialysis, followed by physicochemical/structural characterization (sodium dodecyl sulfate–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS–PAGE), Limulus amebocyte lysate (LAL) endotoxin testing, transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and immunofluorescence with type I collagen antibodies) and biological evaluation in vitro (3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) cytotoxicity on MRC5…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCollagen: Extraction and Characterization · Wound Healing and Treatments · Seaweed-derived Bioactive Compounds
