Stable, Easy-to-Handle, Fully Autologous Electrospun Polymer-Peptide Skin Equivalent for Severe Burn Injuries
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Severe burn injuries represent a significant clinical challenge due to their complex healing process and the high risk of complications, including infection, scarring, and contracture formation. Current therapeutic approaches for burn wound treatment include autologous donor-site grafting and advanced cell therapy techniques like cultured epidermal autografts (CEA), which successfully facilitate wound closure through re-epithelialization. However, CEAs are limited by fragility, shrinkage, lack of a dermal layer, and risks of contamination. Here, aiming to overcome these limitations, we developed a personalized skin equivalent featuring an engineered scaffold composed of electrospun polycaprolactone (PCL) functionalized with the bioactive peptide fluorenylmethyloxycarbonyl-phenylalanine-arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (Fmoc-FRGD). This scaffold is designed to mimic the natural extracellular matrix (ECM), promoting cellular adhesion, integration, and proliferation while maintaining structural integrity. In-vitro analysis demonstrated the scaffold’s ability to support multi-layered human skin cell growth, while in-vivo experiments confirmed its efficacy in facilitating wound closure and full-thickness skin regeneration in a murine model. This bioengineered skin equivalent is mechanically robust, easy to handle, fully autologous and exhibits no contraction, offering a transformative therapeutic alternative for the treatment of severe burn injuries.