| Literature DB >> 26509156 |
Inmaculada Ortega-Oller1, Miguel Padial-Molina1, Pablo Galindo-Moreno1, Francisco O'Valle2, Ana Belén Jódar-Reyes3, Jose Manuel Peula-García4.
Abstract
Poly-lactic-co-glycolic acid (PLGA) is one of the most widely used synthetic polymers for development of delivery systems for drugs and therapeutic biomolecules and as component of tissue engineering applications. Its properties and versatility allow it to be a reference polymer in manufacturing of nano- and microparticles to encapsulate and deliver a wide variety of hydrophobic and hydrophilic molecules. It additionally facilitates and extends its use to encapsulate biomolecules such as proteins or nucleic acids that can be released in a controlled way. This review focuses on the use of nano/microparticles of PLGA as a delivery system of one of the most commonly used growth factors in bone tissue engineering, the bone morphogenetic protein 2 (BMP2). Thus, all the needed requirements to reach a controlled delivery of BMP2 using PLGA particles as a main component have been examined. The problems and solutions for the adequate development of this system with a great potential in cell differentiation and proliferation processes under a bone regenerative point of view are discussed.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26509156 PMCID: PMC4609778 DOI: 10.1155/2015/415289
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Schematic representation of the main BMP molecular pathway to osteogenesis. BMPs interact with cell surface receptors I and II to activate Smads 1, 5, and 8. These activated Smads activate Smad 4. All together as a protein complex activate Runx2, Dlx5, and Osterix.
Summary of clinical and animal studies using BMP-2 for sinus floor elevation (adapted from [38]). The included studies overall concluded that rhBMP-2 induces new bone formation with comparable bone quality and quantity of newly formed bone to that induced by autogenous bone graft.
| Reference | Study design | Follow-up (months) | Species (subjects) | Core biopsy harvesting (months) | Graft material | % Newly formed bone | Bone height gain (mm) | Bone width gain (mm) | Bone density (mg/mL) | Immune response | Histology |
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| Boyne et al. 2005 [ | RCT | 52 | Human (48) | 6–11 | 0.75 mg/mL rhBMP-2/ACS | NA | 11.29 | Crest: 2.02 | 84 | None | NA |
| 1.50 mg/mL rhBMP-2/ACS | 0.47 | Crest: 1.98 | 134 | ||||||||
| Autogenous bone graft; autogenous bone graft + allogeneic bone graft | 10.16 | Crest: 4.66 | 350 | ||||||||
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| Triplett et al. 2009 [ | RCT | 58 | Human (160) | 6 | 1.50 mg/mL rhBMP-2/ACS | NA | 7.83 ± 3.52 | NA | 200 | None | Rich vascular marrow space high in cellular content |
| Autogenous bone graft (iliac crest, tibia or oral cavity); autogenous bone graft + allogeneic bone graft | 9.46 ± 4.11 | 283 | Osteoclasts still present; higher fibrous tissue | ||||||||
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| Kao et al. 2012 [ | Prospective | 6–9 | Human (22) | 6–9 | rhBMP-2/ACS + ABB | 16.04 ± 7.45 | NA | NA | NA | None | Fewer ABB particles; less newly formed bone (woven and mature bone structure) |
| ABB | 24.85 ± 5.82 | More ABB particles remaining; higher newly formed bone (woven and matured bone structure) | |||||||||
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| Nevins et al. 1996 [ | Prospective | 12 | Goat (6) | 12 | rhBMP-2/ACS | NA | NA | NA | NA | None | Dense isolated trabeculae and bone marrow; osteoblast and osteoclasts; no cortical bone |
| ACS/Buffer | Collagenous connective tissue; no evidence of inflammation; no neo-osteogenesis | ||||||||||
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| Hanisch et al. 1997 [ | RCT | 24 | Nonhuman primate (12) | 24 | rhBMP-2/ACS | NA | 6.0 ± 0.3 | NA | 14.4 ± 2.9 | NA | Newly formed bone indistinguishable from residual bone |
| ACS | 2.6 ± 0.3 | 13.9 ± 4.6 | |||||||||
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| Wada et al. 2001 [ | Prospective | 8 | Rabbit (10) | 8 | rhBMP-2/ACS | 22.4 ± 4.4 | NA | NA | NA | NA | Cortical bone formation in both groups; trabeculae with clear lamellar structure were embedded in fatty marrow |
| Autogenous bone graft (iliac crest) | 21.9 ± 4.5 | ||||||||||
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| Lee et al. 2013 [ | Prospective | 8 | Mini-pig (8) | 8 | rhBMP-2/ACS | NA | 9.3 ± 0.5 | NA | 51.9 ± 3 | NA | Newly formed cancellous bone; new bone continuous with resident bone; woven bone in fibrovascular and fatty marrow |
| Autogenous bone graft (iliac crest) | 8.6 ± 0.7 | 32.9 ± 2.5 | Irregular and variable bone among different subjects | ||||||||
NA: not available; RCT: randomized clinical trial; ACS: absorbable collagen sponge; ABB: anorganic bovine bone.
Figure 2Double emulsion procedure (water/oil/water emulsion, W1/O/W2) to obtain PLGA micro/nanoparticles. Depending on the synthesis conditions (stabilizers, solvents and mixing procedure) it is possible to obtain micro-nanospheres with a uniform matrix or micro-nanocapsules with a core-shell structure. Immunoparticles used for directed delivery can be obtained by attaching specific antibody molecules on the particle surface.
Figure 3Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) photography of PLGA nanoparticles obtained by a double emulsion emulsification procedure. This system with spherical shape, low polydispersity, and nanoscopic scale shows the intended properties for an adequate physiological distribution and cell internalization.
Figure 4PLGA/poloxamers188 blend nanoparticles. (a) Scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) photography; (b) scanning electron microscopy (SEM) photography. STEM technique allows the analysis of the nanoparticle structure with an internal region with a low polymer density, which is representative of nanocapsules with core-shell structure.
Figure 5Electrophoretic mobility versus pH for PLGA nanoparticles with different characteristics. (▼) PLGA, (■) PLGA/poloxamer188 blend, and (∙) PLGA covered by Immuno-γ-globulin. The different surface composition affects the electrokinetic behaviour of bare nanoparticles. Surface charge values were screened by the presence of nonionic surfactant as poloxamers, or, in a higher extension, by the presence of antibody molecules attached on the surface.
Figure 6Release profiles. (○) BSA release from PLGA nanoparticles with high initial burst release; (red dots line) biphasic model combining a moderate initial burst and a subsequent sustained release; (blue dash line) triphasic model with a lag of release between both initial and sustained release phases; (dash-dot green line) incomplete release.
Nano/microparticles systems to encapsulate GFs, mainly BMP2 growth factor. Most of them are in the microscopic scale and were used to be entrapped into scaffold of different characteristics. PVA has been the more used surfactant-stabilizer. It is possible to find both, encapsulation and surface adsorption of the growth factors with high-moderate efficiency. The use of heparin as stabilizer reduces significantly the initial burst release, favoring a sustained release in the time. The bioactivity of the GF was preserved in most of the systems and coencapsulation with other biomolecules seems to have a similar effect than the use of surfactants as stabilizers.
| Polymers | Stabilizer | Size | Encapsulation | Release | Biological activity | Reference |
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| PLGA | PVA | 10–20 | Adsorbed rhBMP2 | 20 ng/mL of constant sustained release | Better bone formation after 8 weeks | Fu et al. 2013 [ |
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| PLGA | PVA | 10–100 | rhBMP2-BSA | Burst (20%) | BMP2 molecules with bioactivity | Tian et al. 2012 [ |
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| PLGA 75 : 25 | PVA | 182 | 82% | — | Good bone |
Rodríguez-Évora et al. 2014 [ |
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| PLGA | PVA | 228 | 60,5% | 30% initial burst. Slower release of 4% per week. After 8 weeks 60% released | No loss of bioactivity | Reyes et al. 2013 [ |
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| PLGA/PEG | No double emulsion synthesis | 100–200 | Adsorbed BMP2 | 13% initial burst. Slower release of 0.01–8% per day. After 23 days 70% released | Substantial bone regeneration of the scaffold | Rahman et al. 2014 [ |
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| Different PLGA | PVA | 20–100 | 30% (uncapped PLGA) | 26–49% (1 day) | No loss of bioactivity | Lupu-Haber et al. 2013 [ |
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| PLGA 75 : 25 | PVA | 5–125 | — | Initial burst 30% (1 day) | Higher volumes and surface area coverage of new bone | Wink et al. 2014 [ |
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| PLGA | Heparin | 200–800 nm | Adsorbed BMP2 | No initial burst. Sustained over 4 weeks | Significant reduction of the BMP2 dose for good bone formation | La et al. 2010 [ |
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| PLGA | Heparin- Poloxamer | 160 nm | Adsorbed BMP2 | Initial burst (4–7%) linear profile | Higher matrix mineralization of regenerated bone | Chung et al. 2007 [ |
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| PLGA | Heparin | 100–250 nm | Adsorbed 94% | Initial burst 10% (1 day) | No loss of bioactivity | Jeon et al. 2008 [ |
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| PLGA | PVA | ~300 nm | 80% | 85% initial burst (1 day) | No loss of bioactivity | Yilgor et al. 2009 [ |
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| PLGA (in rings) | PVA | 215 | 66% | Moderate burst | 60% of calvaria defect were healed |
Rodríguez-Évora et al. 2013 [ |
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| PLGA-Poloxamer 188 Blend | Poloxamer | 150 nm | FGF-BSA-Heparin | 40% initial burst (1 day), 60% (30 days) | No loss of bioactivity | d'Angelo et al. 2010 [ |
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| Different PLGA polymers | PVA |
| rhBMP2 adsorption | 20–80% initial burst (1 day) | — |
Schrier et al. 2001 [ |
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| PLGA/PEG | PVA | 37–67 | 72–99% | 33% initial burst (1 day) | Little loss of bioactivity |
Lochmann et al. 2010 [ |
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| PLGA/PLGA-PEG-PLGA | PVA | 100 | HSA-BMP2 | 70% initial burst (1 day) | No loss of bioactivity | White et al. 2013 [ |
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| PLGA | PVA | 100–1000 nm |
| 30% initial burst (1 day) | Biological activity was preserved using BSA and | Pirooznia et al. 2012 [ |