| Literature DB >> 26029692 |
Abstract
Inflammation plays a major role in the rejection of biomaterial implants. In addition, despite playing an important role in the early stages of wound healing, dysregulated inflammation has a negative impact on the wound healing processes. Thus, strategies to modulate excessive inflammation are needed. Through the use of biomaterials to control the release of anti-inflammatory therapeutics, increased control over inflammation is possible in a range of pathological conditions. However, the choice of biomaterial (natural or synthetic), and the form it takes (solid, hydrogel, or micro/nanoparticle) is dependent on both the cause and tissue location of inflammation. These considerations also influence the nature of the anti-inflammatory therapeutic that is incorporated into the biomaterial to be delivered. In this report, the range of biomaterials and anti-inflammatory therapeutics that have been combined will be discussed, as well as the functional benefit observed. Furthermore, we point toward future strategies in the field that will bring more efficacious anti-inflammatory therapeutics closer to realization.Entities:
Keywords: biomaterials; controlled release; drug delivery; foreign body response; inflammation
Year: 2015 PMID: 26029692 PMCID: PMC4432793 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2015.00067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Figure 1Biomaterials to reduce inflammation: (A) biomaterial forms used to deliver therapeutics and (B) anti-inflammatory therapeutics that have been delivered.
Examples of anti-inflammatory therapies delivered from solid scaffolds.
| Biomaterial system | Therapeutic | Dose | Reference | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PLGA | SDF-1α | 50 μg SDF-1α | Stem cell migration assay | Mouse subcutaneous implantation | Increased vessel density | Thevenot et al. ( |
| Enhanced MSC engraftment | ||||||
| Reduced inflammatory response (IL-1α, IL-6, TNF-α) | ||||||
| Collagen | IL-10 pDNA | 2.5 μg IL-10 pDNA | n/a | Rat subcutaneous model | Reduced cell infiltration | van Putten et al. ( |
| Reduced EDI+ cells | ||||||
| Reduced collagenase activity | ||||||
| Collagen | IL-10 pDNA polyplexes and MSCs | 2 μg IL-10 pDNA | IL-10 secretion | Rat intramuscular implantation model | Increased stem cell survival | Holladay et al. ( |
| Metabolic activity | Increased ratio of regulatory to inflammatory macrophages | |||||
| Collagen | IL-10 pDNA polyplexes and MSCs | 2 μg IL-10 pDNA | n/a | Rat myocardial infarction model | Improved cardiac function and stem cell survival | Holladay et al. ( |
| Increased ratio of regulatory to inflammatory macrophages | ||||||
| Reduction in apoptosis | ||||||
| Silk-fibroin/hyaluronic acid | n/a | n/a | n/a | Rat myocardial infarction model | Reduced CD68+ cells | Chi et al. ( |
| Improved wall thickness and fractional shortening | ||||||
| Reduced apoptosis | ||||||
| Increased vascular density, and VEGF, bFGF, and HGF expression | ||||||
| Hyaluronic acid | MSCs | 0.2–1 × 106 | MSC proliferations | Porcine myocardial infarction model | Reduced CD3+ cells | Muscari et al. ( |
| VEGF expression | Reduced inflammatory score | |||||
| Poly (L-lactide) | Ibuprofen | Not specified | Ibuprofen release prolife in neutral and acidic pH | Rat muscle wound model | Improved muscle regeneration | Yuan et al. ( |
| Fiber diameter | ||||||
| Reduced IL-6 and TNF-α and IL-6 (protein and gene expression) | ||||||
| Increased VEGF and TGF-β (protein and gene expression) | ||||||
| Poly (L-lactic acid) | Tetrandrine | 5–20 mg/g | Tetrandrine release | Rat wound healing model | Reduction in inflammation in 20 mg/g tetrandrine group observed on H&E stained sections | Wang et al. ( |
| Cell viability | ||||||
| RAW 264.7 production of NO, TNF-α, and IL-6 on scaffold | ||||||
| Reduction in gene expression of iNOS, TNF-α, IL-6, and Cox-II | ||||||
| Poly (lactide-co-Glycolide) | IL-10 viral vector | 2 × 107 viral particles | Reduced RAW 264.7 production of TNF-α and increased IL-10 following LPS treatment | Implantation into intraperitoneal mouse fat pad | Reduced leukocyte infiltration | Gower et al. ( |
| Increased IL-10 expression and reduced IFN-γ expression | ||||||
| Poly (lactic-co-Glycolic acid) film | FTY720 | 1:200 drug-to-polymer weight | Change in cytokine secretion of RAW 264.7 and HUVEC | Dorsal skinfold and muscle ischemia models | Increase in presence of anti-inflammatory macrophages | Awojoodu et al. ( |
| Increased arteriole and length density | ||||||
Examples of anti-inflammatory therapies delivered from hydrogels.
| Biomaterialsystem | Therapeutic | Dose | Reference | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PEG hydrogel (10,000 Mw) | IL-1R inhibitory peptide (IL-1RIP) | 1% IL-1RIP | Cell viability and insulin secretion from MIN6 cells | n/a | n/a | Su et al. ( |
| Hyaluronic acid | Dexamethasone | 2.2–4.4 × 10-5 M | Cell viability | Subcutaneous implantation model | Reduced infiltration of macrophages and neutrophils observed on H&E stained sections | Ito et al. ( |
| Hydrogel swelling ratio | ||||||
| Dexamethasone release profile | ||||||
| Reduced IL-6 and TNF-α production by RAW 264.7 | ||||||
| Hyaluronic acid | Anti TNF-α antibody | 400 μg/ml | Binding affinity | Rat burn models | Reduced inflammatory cell infiltration observed on H&E stained sections | Friedrich et al. ( |
| Reduced non-viable tissue | ||||||
| Reduced IL-1β protein expression | ||||||
| Chitosan hydrogel | ADSCs | 4 × 106 ADSCs | Cell adhesion and expression of adhesion genes in response to ROS | Rat myocardial infarction model | Increased ICAM-1, VCAM-1, and SDF-1 expression and ADSC retention | Liu et al. ( |
| Reduction in ROS, apoptosis, and infarct size | ||||||
| Increased wall thickness and blood vessel density, improved cardiac function | ||||||
| Chitosan hydrogel | ADSCs | 2 × 106 ADSCs | n/a | Rat acute renal ischemia-reperfusion model | Reduction in apoptosis and ROS expression | Gao et al. ( |
| Increased stem cell retention and renal cell proliferation | ||||||
| Reduction in serum levels of creatinine and blood urea nitrogen | ||||||
| Alginate microcapsules containing islet cells | Curcumin | 1 mg/ml | n/a | STZ-induced diabetic mouse model | Improved blood glucose level | Dang et al. ( |
| Reduced gene expression of CD68, CD19, CD74, CD8, TNF-α, TGF-β, and αSMA | ||||||
| Collagen hydrogel | Resveratrol | 0.5% | Compressive strength free radical scavenging | Rabbit osteochondral defect | Reduction in IL-1β, MMP-13, and Cox-II mRNA | Wang et al. ( |
| Collagen degradation | Increased SOX-9, aggrecan, collagen I and III mRNA | |||||
| Cell viability | Improved neotissue formation and integration | |||||
| Increased collagen II deposition | ||||||
| Gelatin | Triptolide [and BMP-2] | 2.5, 5, or 10 mg | Release profile | Rat critical-sized bone defect | Reduced lymphocytes, netrophils, and mast cells | Ratanavaraporn et al. ( |
| Relationship between degradation and release profile | ||||||
| Reduction in IL-6 and IL-10 protein expression in J774.1 macrophage-like cells | Reduced mRNA expression of IL-6, IL-10, TNF-α, NF-kB, and MMP-14 | |||||
| Proliferation and ALP activity in MC3T3-E1 cells | Increased bone mineral density | |||||
| Peptide amphiphile | Dexamethasone | Not specified | Dexamethasone release | Mouse subcutaneous model | Reduced ROS formation | Webber et al. ( |
| Reduced NF-kB activity in THP-1 cells following LPS activation | Reduced inflammatory cell infiltration observed on H&E stained sections | |||||
| Cell viability following treatment with Dex-PA | ||||||
| Poly (ethylene glycol)-maleimide (Coating on a neural electrode) | IL-1RA | 150 pg | Coating thickness | Rat neural implantation model | Increased IL-6, MMP-2, and CNTF | Gutowski et al. ( |
| Cell adhesion | ||||||
| Reduced expression of IL-1β and TNF-α in microglia/astrocytes treated with GMCSF | ||||||
| IL-1RA release profile | ||||||
Micro and nanoparticles used to deliver anti-inflammatory therapies.
| Biomaterialsystem | Therapeutic | Dose | Reference | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tetraethylene glycol and cyclohexyl methacrylate nanoparticles | IL-1RA | 5 μg IL-1RA | Nanoparticle size | Rat intra-articular model | Increased retention of IL-1RA compared with saline delivery | Whitmire et al. ( |
| Target specificity | ||||||
| NF-κβ activity in NIH3T3 fibroblasts | ||||||
| Poly (hydroxy-ethyl-methacrylate) [p(HEMA)] | (BSA as a model protein) | 500 μg Vivo-Tag-S750-BSA | Particle size Cell viability | Rat intra-articular injection | Increased retention compared with soluble protein | Singh et al. ( |
| Poly (cyclohexane- 1,4-diylacetone dimethylene ketal) (PCADK) | P38 inhibitor | 50 μg P38 inhibitor | Particle size Activation of RAW 264.7 macrophages | Rat myocardial infarction model | Reduced P38 activation, superoxide, and TNF-α production | Sy et al. ( |
| Reduced fibrotic area and improved cardiac function | ||||||
| Poly (cyclohexane- 1,4-diylacetone dimethylene ketal) (PCADK) | Superoxide dismutase (SOD) | 80U SOD | Particle size | Rat myocardial infarction model | Reduced superoxide production and apoptosis | Seshadri et al. ( |
| Superoxide scavenging | Improved cardiac function | |||||
| PLGA | Dexamethasone | 1.3 and 26 wt% | Dexamthasone loading and release | Mouse subcutaneous injection | Reduced cathepsin activity up to 10 days | Dang et al. ( |
| Reduced inflammatory cell infiltration up to 30 days | ||||||
| PLGA | Methylprednisolone | 156 μg | Methylprednisolone release | Rat spinal cord contusion model | Reduced ED1+ cells | Chvatal et al. ( |
| NO production by LPS-treated microglia | Reduced Calplain and iNOS | |||||
| Reduced lesion volume | ||||||
| β1,3- | MAP4K4 siRNA | 20 μg/kg body weight | MAP4K4 and TNF-α knockdown | Mouse LPS-induced lethality | Reduced MAP4K4 mRNA in peritoneal macrophages, spleen, liver, and lung | Aouadi et al. ( |
| Reduced TNF-α and IL-1β mRNA | ||||||
| Reduced serum and peritoneal TNF-α | ||||||
| Galactosylated Trimethyl Chitosanecysteine | MAP4K4 siRNA | 250 μg/kg body weight/day | Charge and cell uptake | Mouse ulcerative colitis | MAP4K4 and TNF-α mRNA knockdown | Zhang et al. ( |
| MAP4K4 and TNF-α mRNA knockdown | Reduced colonic TNF-α protein and MPO activity | |||||
| Reduced TNF-α protein expression | Reduced infiltration of mononucleur cells observed on H&E sections | |||||
| PLGA | FcγRIII-targeting siRNA | ≈16–23 μg | siRNA release | Rat temporomandibular inflammation | Reduced IL-1β and IL-6 protein expression | Mountziaris et al. ( |
| siRNA loading efficiency | Reduced FcγRIII expression | |||||
| PLGA | TNF-α siRNA | 0.12 nM | Particle size siRNA release | Mouse collagen induced arthritis | Reduced synovial inflammatory score | Présumey et al. ( |
| Reduced TNF-α mRNA and protein expression | Reduced TNF-α protein expression | |||||
| PLGA | Dexamethasone and COX-2 siRNA | n/a | Dexamethasone and siRNA loading | n/a | n/a | Park et al. ( |
| Particle size, charge, cell viability, uptake, and transfection efficiency | ||||||
| PGE2 secretion | ||||||
| COX-2 and iNOS knockdown in C28-I2 | ||||||
| Reduced mPGES-1, COX-2, and iNOS protein expression | ||||||
| Reduced caspase-3 | ||||||
| PLGA-b-PEG | Ac2-26 (annexin-A1 mimetic peptide) | 100 ng | Particle size | Murine peritonitis | Reduced number of PMNs | Kamaly et al. ( |
| Ac2-26 release | Muscle ischemia | Reduced MPO activity | ||||
| PLGA-b-PEG | GW3965 (liver X receptor agonist) | 8 mg/kg | Particle size | Mouse zymosan-induced Peritonitis | Reduced PMN infiltration | Gadde et al. ( |
| GW3965 release profile | Reduced TNF-α and MCP-1 gene and protein expression in peritoneal exudates | |||||
| Reduced TNF-α and MCP-1 gene and protein expression in peritoneal macrophages | ||||||
| C12-200 lipid, disteroylphosphatidyl choline, cholesterol, and PEG-DMG | CCR2 siRNA | 1 mg/kg | n/a | Mouse ischemia/reperfusion | Reduced CCR2 expression | Leuschner et al. ( |
| Mouse permanent ligation | Reduced myocardial area-at-risk | |||||
| Mouse streptozotocin-induced diabetes | Reduced Ly-6Cighhigh macrophages, CD11b+ cells, and lesion volume in atheresclerotic plaque | |||||
| Mouse islet transplantation | Increased survival of pancreatic islet allografts | |||||
| Mouse tumor xenograft model | Reduced tumor volume, tumor associated macrophages, and CD11b+ cells | |||||
| Urethane acrylate non-ionomer (UAN) | Paclitaxel | 200 μg UAN-Paclitaxel nanoparticles | Viability and dose response | Mouse tumor cytotoxicity assay | Reduced tumor volume | Park et al. ( |
| PLGA and chitosan | Spantide II and ketoprofen | Not specified | Particle loading efficiency | Mouse allergic contact dermatitis | Increased drug retention | Shah et al. ( |
| Spantide II and ketoprofen release profile | Reduced ear | |||||
| Reduced IL-17 and IL-23 expression | ||||||
| Reduced trans-epidermal water loss | ||||||
Figure 2Macrophage phenotype: inflammation may be controlled by modulation of the phenotype from a pro-inflammatory nature to anti-inflammatory and wound healing. Cytokines including IL-4, IL-10, and IL-13 have been implicated in the transition of macrophages from a pro-inflammatory phenotype to a more regulatory, anti-inflammatory and wound healing phenotype in vivo.