1. Academic Validation
  2. Dynamic matrix engineering promotes nascent protein deposition to drive cell migration and expedite Re-epithelization in chronic wound

Dynamic matrix engineering promotes nascent protein deposition to drive cell migration and expedite Re-epithelization in chronic wound

  • Bioact Mater. 2025 Oct 28:56:455-467. doi: 10.1016/j.bioactmat.2025.10.020.
Songsong Shi 1 Wei Zhang 2 Yuanman Yu 1 Jiaqi Qiu 1 Runzhi Huang 2 Shizhao Ji 2 Xue Qu 1 3 4
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Key Laboratory for Ultrafine Materials of Ministry of Education, Frontiers Science Center for Materiobiology and Dynamic Chemistry, School of Materials Science and Engineering, East China University of Science and Technology, Shanghai, 200237, China.
  • 2 Department of Burn Surgery, The First Affiliated Hospital of Naval Medical University, Shanghai, 200433, China.
  • 3 Shanghai Frontier Science Research Base of Optogenetic Techniques for Cell Metabolism, East China University of Science and Technology, Shanghai, 200237, China.
  • 4 Wenzhou Key Laboratory of Tissue Regeneration Medical Materials, Wenzhou, 325000, China.
Abstract

Chronic wound healing remains a formidable clinical challenge, fundamentally hindered by stalled re-epithelialization caused by dysfunctional cell migration arising from a disordered mechano-biochemical microenvironment. Current therapeutic strategies relying on externally-assisted growth factors or mechanical stimulation often neglect the inherent capacity of the native, dynamic extracellular matrix (ECM) to govern cell behavior, specifically its viscoelasticity. By engineering a reversible hydrazone-crosslinked lysozyme-polyethylene glycol (LZM-PEG) dynamic hydrogel, we elucidated the mechanism whereby enhanced network dynamics activate early cell mechanotransduction via the integrin-FAK signaling axis, promoting nascent protein deposition which subsequently drives directed cell migration. Importantly, this mechano-biological effect exhibits distinct network dynamics dependence, as evidenced by the complete abolition of cell migration upon network rigidification, suggesting that matrix network dynamics constitutes a key regulatory factor. Diabetic mouse models demonstrated that this dynamic hydrogel accelerates chronic wound re-epithelialization by driving epithelial cell migration, solely by recapitulating ECM dynamics without exogenous interventions. This therapeutic effect reveals that the intrinsic mechano-bioactivity embedded in hydrogel's dynamic network can accelerate tissue repair by modulating in situ cell behavior. Collectively, this study uncovers a mechano-biological axis: matrix dynamics-nascent protein deposition-cell migration, which provides mechanobiological insights into tissue repair, and offers a novel "materiobiology" design strategy for next-generation regenerative Materials.

Keywords

Cell migration; Chronic wound healing; Hydrogel; Nascent protein; Stress relaxation.

Figures
Products
Inhibitors & Agonists
Other Products