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Synthesis of an Antimicrobial Thioanthraquinone Compound to Produce Biodegradable Electrospun Mats for Tissue Engineering Purposes
Author(s) -
Yeşim Müge Şahin
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of the turkish chemical society section a chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.179
H-Index - 6
ISSN - 2149-0120
DOI - 10.18596/jotcsa.422255
Subject(s) - biomaterial , electrospinning , antimicrobial , materials science , fourier transform infrared spectroscopy , anthraquinone , ultimate tensile strength , tissue engineering , chemical engineering , chemistry , nanotechnology , biomedical engineering , polymer , organic chemistry , composite material , engineering , medicine
In the present study for the first time in the literature, novel S-substituted bioactive anthraquinone compound were synthesized with a new, easy and less energetic reaction method (Patent Number: TR2016/19610) from 1-chloro-9,10-dihydrodiagnosisxy-anthraquinone and butyl-3-mercaptopropionate. The resultant structure present remarkable biological properties It was purified by column chromatography. All obtained structures were characterized with spectroscopic methods (NMR, MS, FT-IR, UV etc). Antimicrobial properties of bioactive compound were determined as well. The resultant thioanthraquinone compound has been synthesized for the first time in the literature and its applications as a biomaterial were discussed in the present study. Subsequently, biodegradable electrospun mats were produced via electrospinning method for their usage in treatment as a biomaterial. Structural (FTIR), morphological (FEG-SEM) biological (antimicrobial and in-vitro tests) and mechanical (tensile testing) characterizations were conducted for these nanobiomaterials. Presenting an advantage of the novel antimicrobial compound, the produced electrospun nanobiocomposites exhibited remarkable biological, mechanical properties. With a purposeful compound synthesis and a subsequent nanobiocomposite production, the obtained electrospun mats are good canditates for biomaterials for tissue engineering purposes and wound healing materials.

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