2 research outputs found
Structural Color Ionic Hydrogel Patches for Wound Management
Ionic hydrogels have attracted extensive attention because
of their
wide applicability in electronic skins, biosensors, and other biomedical
areas. Tremendous effort is dedicated to developing ionic hydrogels
with improved detection accuracy and multifunctionality. Herein, we
present an inverse opal scaffold-based structural color ionic hydrogel
with the desired features as intelligent patches for wound management.
The patches were composed of a polyacrylamide-poly(vinyl alcohol)-polyethylenimine-lithium
chloride (PAM–PVA-PEI-LiCl) inverse opal scaffold and a vascular
endothelial growth factor (VEGF) mixed methacrylated gelatin (GelMA)
hydrogel filler surface. The scaffold imparted the composite patches
with brilliant structural color, conductive property, and freezing
resistance, while the VEGF-GelMA surface could not only prevent the
ionic hydrogel from the interference of complex wound conditions but
also contribute to the cell proliferation and tissue repair in the
wounds. Thus, the hydrogel patches could serve as electronic skins
for in vivo wound healing and monitoring with high
accuracy and reliability. These features indicate that the proposed
structural color ionic hydrogel patches have great potential for clinical
applications
Noninvasive Multiplexed Analysis of Bladder Cancer-Derived Urine Exosomes via Janus Magnetic Microspheres
Bladder cancer greatly endangers human health, and its
early diagnosis
is of vital importance. Exosomes, which contain proteins and nucleic
acids related to their source cells, are expected to be an emerging
biomarker for bladder cancer detection. Here, we propose a novel system
for multiplexed analysis of bladder cancer-derived urine exosomes
based on Janus magnetic microspheres as barcoded microcarriers. The
microcarriers are constructed by droplet-templated coassembly of colloidal
silica nanoparticles and magnetic nanoparticles under a magnetic field.
The microcarriers possess one hemisphere with structural color and
the other hemisphere with magneto-responsiveness. Benefiting from
the unique structure, these Janus microcarriers could serve as barcodes
and could move controllably in a sample solution, thus realizing the
multiplex detection of exosomes with high sensitivity. Notably, the
present platform is noninvasive since a urine specimen, as an ideal
source of bladder cancer-derived exosomes, is employed as the sample
solution. This feature, together with the good sensitivity, specificity,
low sample consumption, and easy operation, indicates the great potential
of the platform for bladder cancer diagnosis in clinical applications
