Diabetic foot ulceration is a devastating diabetic complication with unmet needs. We explored the efficacy of calcium-crosslinked alginate dressings in topically delivering primary macrophages and their secretome to diabetic wounds. The alginate bandages had a microporous structure that enabled even cell loading with prolonged cell survival and egress following wound placement. In vitro experiments showed that we could successfully differentiate and polarize primary murine bone marrow derived monocytes into M0, M1, M2a and M2c defined states with distinct gene expression, surface protein and secretome profiles. The primary macrophages were delivered in the bandages, migrated within the wounds and were still present for as long as 16 days post-injury. In wounds of db/db mice, treatment with all macrophage subtypes and their secretome, when compared to control, accelerated wound healing. Bulk RNA sequencing analysis and multiplex protein quantification of wound lysates revealed that M2c macrophages conditioned media had the most impact in wound healing affecting processes like neurogenesis, while M1 conditioned media promoted keratinization and epidermal differentiation. Collectively, our results indicate that alginate dressings can serve as a delivery platform for topical treatment of diabetic wounds and that conditioned media from distinctly polarized macrophages is equally or more effective than their parental cells in advancing wound healing and could therefore be a promising and technically advantageous alternative to cell therapy.
Keywords: Alginate; Diabetic wound healing; Hydrogel; Macrophage; Polarization; Secretome.
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