Soft tissue defects like hernia and post-surgical fistula formation can be resolved with modern biomaterials in the form of meshes without post-operative complications. In the present study hand knitted silk meshes were surface coated with regenerated silk fibroin hydrogel and pure natural extracts. Two phytochemicals (Licorice extract (LE) and Bearberry extract (BE)) and the two honeybee products (royal jelly (RJ) and honey (HE)) were incorporated separately to induce antibacterial, anti-inflammatory, and wound healing ability to the silk hydrogel coated knitted silk meshes. Meshes were dip coated with a blend of 4 % silk hydrogel (w/v) and 5 % extracts. Dried modified meshes were characterized using SEM, DMA, GC-MS and FTIR. Antimicrobial testing, in-vitro cytotoxicity, in-vitro wound healing and Q-RT-PCR were also performed. SEM analysis concluded that presence of coating reduced the pore size up to 47.7 % whereas, fiber diameter was increased up to 17.9 % as compared to the control. The presence of coating on the mesh improved the mechanical strength/Young's modulus by 1602.8 %, UTS by 451.7 % and reduced the % strain by 51.12 %. Sustained release of extracts from MHRJ (62.9 % up to 72 h) confirmed that it can induce antibacterial activity against surgical infections. Cytocompatibility testing and gene expression results suggest that out of four variables MHRJ presented best cell viability, % wound closure and expression of wound healing marker genes. In-vivo analyses in rat hernia model were carried out using only MHRJ variant, which also confirmed the non- toxic nature and wound healing characteristics of the modified mesh. The improved cell proliferation and activated wound healing in vitro and in vivo suggested that MHRJ could be a valuable candidate to promote cell infiltration and activate soft tissue and hernia repair as a biomedical implant.
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