Roam Jacob L, Nguyen Peter K, Elbert Donald L
Department of Biomedical Engineering and Center for Materials Innovation, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Department of Biomedical Engineering and Center for Materials Innovation, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Biomaterials. 2014 Aug;35(24):6473-81. doi: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2014.04.027. Epub 2014 May 9.
Introduction of spatial patterning of proteins, while retaining activity and releasability, is critical for the field of regenerative medicine. Reversible binding to heparin, which many biological molecules exhibit, is one potential pathway to achieve this goal. We have covalently bound heparin to poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) microspheres to create useful spatial patterns of glial-cell derived human neurotrophic factor (GDNF) in scaffolds to promote peripheral nerve regeneration. Labeled GDNF was incubated with heparinated microspheres that were subsequently centrifuged into cylindrical scaffolds in distinct layers containing different concentrations of GDNF. The GDNF was then allowed to diffuse out of the scaffold, and release was tracked via fluorescent scanning confocal microscopy. The measured release profile was compared to predicted Fickian models. Solutions of reaction-diffusion equations suggested the concentrations of GDNF in each discrete layer that would result in a nearly linear concentration gradient over much of the length of the scaffold. The agreement between the predicted and measured GDNF concentration gradients was high. Multilayer scaffolds with different amounts of heparin and GDNF and different crosslinking densities allow the design of a wide variety of gradients and release kinetics. Additionally, fabrication is much simpler and more robust than typical gradient-forming systems due to the low viscosity of the microsphere solutions compared to gelating solutions, which can easily result in premature gelation or the trapping of air bubbles with a nerve guidance conduit. The microsphere-based method provides a framework for producing specific growth factor gradients in conduits designed to enhance nerve regeneration.
在保留活性和可释放性的同时引入蛋白质的空间模式,对再生医学领域至关重要。许多生物分子表现出的与肝素的可逆结合是实现这一目标的一条潜在途径。我们已将肝素共价结合到聚乙二醇(PEG)微球上,以在支架中创建有用的胶质细胞源性神经营养因子(GDNF)空间模式,促进周围神经再生。将标记的GDNF与肝素化微球孵育,随后将其离心到含有不同浓度GDNF的圆柱形支架的不同层中。然后让GDNF从支架中扩散出来,并通过荧光扫描共聚焦显微镜追踪释放情况。将测量的释放曲线与预测的菲克模型进行比较。反应扩散方程的解表明,在支架的大部分长度上会产生近乎线性浓度梯度的每个离散层中GDNF的浓度。预测的和测量的GDNF浓度梯度之间的一致性很高。具有不同肝素和GDNF含量以及不同交联密度的多层支架允许设计各种梯度和释放动力学。此外,由于微球溶液的粘度低于凝胶溶液,与典型的梯度形成系统相比,制造要简单得多且更稳定,凝胶溶液很容易导致过早凝胶化或在神经引导导管中捕获气泡。基于微球的方法为在旨在增强神经再生的导管中产生特定生长因子梯度提供了一个框架。