Development of a bioactive tunable hyaluronic-protein bioconjugate hydrogel for tissue regenerative applications

Every year, there are approximately 500 000 peripheral nerve injury (PNI) procedures due to trauma in the US alone. Autologous and acellular nerve grafts are among current clinical repair options; however, they are limited largely by the high costs associated with donor nerve tissue harvesting and i...

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Published inJournal of materials chemistry. B, Materials for biology and medicine Vol. 11; no. 32; pp. 7663 - 7674
Main Authors Kasper, Mary, Cydis, Madison, Afridi, Abdullah, Smadi, Bassam M, Li, Yuan, Charlier, Alban, Barnes, Brooke E, Hohn, Julia, Cline, Michael J, Carver, Wayne, Matthews, Michael, Savin, Daniel, Rinaldi-Ramos, Carlos M, Schmidt, Christine E
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Royal Society of Chemistry 06.09.2023
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Summary:Every year, there are approximately 500 000 peripheral nerve injury (PNI) procedures due to trauma in the US alone. Autologous and acellular nerve grafts are among current clinical repair options; however, they are limited largely by the high costs associated with donor nerve tissue harvesting and implant processing, respectively. Therefore, there is a clinical need for an off-the-shelf nerve graft that can recapitulate the native microenvironment of the nerve. In our previous work, we created a hydrogel scaffold that incorporates mechanical and biological cues that mimic the peripheral nerve microenvironment using chemically modified hyaluronic acid (HA). However, with our previous work, the degradation profile and cell adhesivity was not ideal for tissue regeneration, in particular, peripheral nerve regeneration. To improve our previous hydrogel, HA was conjugated with fibrinogen using Michael-addition to assist in cell adhesion and hydrogel degradability. The addition of the fibrinogen linker was found to contribute to faster scaffold degradation via active enzymatic breakdown, compared to HA alone. Additionally, cell count and metabolic activity was significantly higher on HA conjugated fibrinogen compared previous hydrogel formulations. This manuscript discusses the various techniques deployed to characterize our new modified HA fibrinogen chemistry physically, mechanically, and biologically. This work addresses the aforementioned concerns by incorporating controllable degradability and increased cell adhesivity while maintaining incorporation of hyaluronic acid, paving the pathway for use in a variety of applications as a multi-purpose tissue engineering platform. Hyaluronic acid-based hydrogels conjugated with a fibrinogen linker were found to contribute to faster scaffold degradation via active enzymatic breakdown, paving the pathway for use in a variety of multi-purpose tissue engineering applications.
Bibliography:Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI
https://doi.org/10.1039/d2tb02766f
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These authors contributed significantly to this work and should be considered cofirst authors.
Mary M Kasper: Conceptualization, Methodology, Validation, Formal Analysis, Investigation, Writing-Original draft preparation, Writing – Review & Editing, Visualization, Supervision. Madison Cydis: Conceptualization, Methodology, Validation, Writing – Review & Editing. Bassam M Smadi: Methodology, Validation, Formal Analysis, Investigation, Writing-Original draft preparation, Writing – Review & Editing. Abdullah Afridi: Methodology, Investigation, Review & Editing. Yuan Li: Methodology, Formal Analysis, Review & Editing. Alban Charlier: Methodology, Formal Analysis, Investigation. Brooke Barnes: Methodology, Validation, Formal Analysis. Julia Hohn: Methodology, Investigation, Resources, Writing – Review & Editing, Michael J Cline: Investigation, Formal Analysis, Writing – Review & Editing. Wayne Carver: Resources, Supervision. Michael Matthews: Methodology, Resources, Supervision Resources, Writing – Review & Editing. Daniel Savin: Methodology, Formal Analysis, Resources, Supervision. Carlos M Rinaldi-Ramos: Conceptualization, Methodology, Writing – Review & Editing, Supervision. Christine Schmidt: Conceptualization, Methodology, Writing – Review & Editing, Supervision, Project Administration, Funding Acquisition
Author Contributions
ISSN:2050-750X
2050-7518
2050-7518
DOI:10.1039/d2tb02766f