| Literature DB >> 30572957 |
Rossana Boni1, Azam Ali2, Amin Shavandi1,3, Andrew N Clarkson4.
Abstract
The nervous system is a crucial component of the body and damages to this system, either by of injury or disease, can result in serious or potentially lethal consequences. Restoring the damaged nervous system is a great challenge due to the complex physiology system and limited regenerative capacity.Polymers, either synthetic or natural in origin, have been extensively evaluated as a solution for restoring functions in damaged neural tissues. Polymers offer a wide range of versatility, in particular regarding shape and mechanical characteristics, and their biocompatibility is unmatched by other biomaterials, such as metals and ceramics. Several studies have shown that polymers can be shaped into suitable support structures, including nerve conduits, scaffolds, and electrospun matrices, capable of improving the regeneration of damaged neural tissues. In general, natural polymers offer the advantage of better biocompatibility and bioactivity, while synthetic or non-natural polymers have better mechanical properties and structural stability. Often, combinations of the two allow for the development of polymeric conduits able to mimic the native physiological environment of healthy neural tissues and, consequently, regulate cell behaviour and support the regeneration of injured nervous tissues.Currently, most of neural tissue engineering applications are in pre-clinical study, in particular for use in the central nervous system, however collagen polymer conduits aimed at regeneration of peripheral nerves have already been successfully tested in clinical trials.This review highlights different types of natural and synthetic polymers used in neural tissue engineering and their advantages and disadvantages for neural regeneration.Entities:
Keywords: Axonal regeneration; Biomaterials; Neural tissue engineering; Neuronal differentiation; Synthetic and natural polymers
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30572957 PMCID: PMC6300901 DOI: 10.1186/s12929-018-0491-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Sci ISSN: 1021-7770 Impact factor: 8.410
Fig. 1Polymeric structure for neural regeneration. Polymeric structures seeded with NGF offer mechanical support for growing neurites that in time will differentiate into fully matured neurons. They regulate biological cues to guide axonal growth and sprouting, to promote the regeneration of the nerve tissue
Fig. 2Polymer coating allows crossing of the BBB. Uncoated therapeutic drugs are unable to cross the BBB, but polymer nanoparticles are able to protect specific therapeutic agents, cross the BBB, and efficiently deliver drugs into damaged areas
The main natural polymers used in neural tissue engineering, biocompatibility in vitro/in vivo, and examples of their applications
| Natural Polymer | Biocompatibility | Biocompatibility | Application | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-clinical Studies | ||||
| Collagen | Non-human primates | Nerve guide | [ | |
| Rats | Hydrogel/scaffold | [ | ||
| Dogs | Nerve conduits | [ | ||
| Cats | Nerve conduits | [ | ||
| Mice | Entubulation | [ | ||
| DRGs | Entubulation | [ | ||
| Rats | Entubulation | [ | ||
| Fish Collagen | rBMSCs | No influence on neural differentiation | [ | |
| Gelatin | hC-MSCs | Electrospun conduits | [ | |
| PC12 | Electrospun conduits | [ | ||
| C17.2 | Nerve conduits for Schwann cells | [ | ||
| RT4-D6P2T | Nerve conduits for Schwann cells | [ | ||
| PC12 | Nerve conduits for Schwann cells | [ | ||
| Rats | Nerve conduit | [ | ||
| Allogeneic rMSCs | Scaffold | [ | ||
| Primary RSCs | Rats | Nanoparticles | [ | |
| PC12 | Hybrid Scaffold | [ | ||
| PC12 | Bioink | [ | ||
| Elastin | Mice | Thermally Responsive ELPs | [ | |
| PC12 | ELPs Drug Depot | [ | ||
| Rats | ELPs Intranasal Drug Delivery | [ | ||
| Hyaluronic Acid | Rats | Hydrogel | [ | |
| NPCs from forebrain cortical neuroepithelium of E13.5 rats | Hydrogel | [ | ||
| C17.2 cells, ReNcells, GRPs | Hydrogel | [ | ||
| DRGs | Hydrogel | [ | ||
| NPCs | Hydrogel | [ | ||
| Rabbits | Nerve Conduit | [ | ||
| Rats | Nerve Conduit | [ | ||
| RSC96 | Nerve Conduit | [ | ||
| NSCs | Drug Delivery | [ | ||
| PC12 | Nanoparticles | [ | ||
| Cerebral cortices of Sprague–Dawley rats | Coating | [ | ||
| Alginate | Cats | Gel | [ | |
| Rats | Gel | [ | ||
| Rats | Sponge | [ | ||
| PDLMSCs and GMSCs | Hybrid scaffold | [ | ||
| PC12 | Hybrid scaffold | [ | ||
| NSCs | Hybrid scaffold | [ | ||
| Rats | Hybrid scaffold | [ | ||
| Chitosan | PC12 | Hydrogel | [ | |
| NPCs from forebrain cortical neuroepithelium of C57 fetal rats | Hydrogel | [ | ||
| NSCs | Hydrogel | [ | ||
| Neuro-2a | Scaffold | [ | ||
| Schwann cells from Sprague-Dawley rats | Scaffold | [ | ||
| U373 | Nanotubes | [ | ||
| BMSCs | Scaffold | [ | ||
| Dogs | Scaffold | [ | ||
| GFP+RG3.6 | Micro/nano vehicle | [ | ||
| Rats | Micro/nano vehicle | [ | ||
| Mice | Micro/nano vehicle | [ | ||
| hNSC | Bioink | [ | ||
| Keratin | Mice | Nerve guide | [ | |
| RT4-D6P2T | Mice | Hydrogel | [ | |
| Rabbits | Hydrogel | [ | ||
| Primates | Hydrogel | [ | ||
| Glial cells | Nanofibrous Scaffold | [ | ||
| Silk | NSCs | Hydrogel | [ | |
| Rats | Hydrogel | [ | ||
| DRGs | Hydrogel | [ | ||
| Primary Hippocampal Neurons | Scaffold | [ | ||
| PC12 | Electrospun scaffold | [ | ||
| Rats | Electrospun scaffold | [ | ||
| Dogs | Electrospun scaffold | [ | ||
| Rats | Nerve Guide | [ | ||
| Rats | Electrode Coating | [ | ||
| Glial Scarring | Electrode Coating | [ | ||
| NT2 | Nerve guide (spider silk) | [ | ||
| NSCs | Matrix (spider silk) | [ | ||
| Clinical Studies | ||||
| Collagen | Peripheral nerve reconstruction | NeuraGen® | [ | |
| Peripheral nerve reconstruction | Neuromaix® | [ | ||
DRGs: dorsal root ganglia; rBMSCs: rat bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells; hC-MSCs: human chorion mesenchymal stem cells; rMSCs: rat mesenchymal stromal cells; RSCs: rat Schwann cells; ELPs: elastin-like polypeptides; NPCs: neural progenitor cells; GRPs: human glial-restricted precursors; PDLMSCs: human periodontal ligament mesenchymal stem cells; GMSCs: gingiva-derived mesenchymal stem cells; NSCs: neural stem cells; BMSCs: bone marrow stromal cells; hNSCs: human neural stem cells.
Fig. 3Polymeric nerve conduit. Components of a polymeric nerve conduit, oriented substratum, support cells, and controlled release of a neural growth factor
The main synthetic polymers used in neural tissue engineering, biocompatibility in vitro/in vivo, and examples of their applications
| Synthetic Polymer | Biocompatibility | Biocompatibility | Application | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Preclinical Studies | ||||
| PLA | Rat SCs | Nanofibrous conduit | [ | |
| NSCs | Nanofibrous conduit | [ | ||
| PLGA | U87 | Microparticles | [ | |
| Dogs | Nerve conduit | [ | ||
| DRGs | Rats | Scaffold | [ | |
| Rats | Microparticles | [ | ||
| PEG | NPCs | Hydrogel | [ | |
| Rats | Hydrogel | [ | ||
| Rats | Intravenous administration | [ | ||
| Guinea pig spinal cord injury model | pure PEG | [ | ||
| Rats | Scaffold | [ | ||
| pHEMA | Rats | Hydrophilic sponge | [ | |
| PC12 | Hydrogel | [ | ||
PLA: polylactic acid; PLGA: poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid); PEG: polyethylene glycol; pHEMA: poly(2-hydroxyethylmethacrylate); SCs: stem cells; NSCs: neural stem cells; DRGs: dorsal root ganglia; NPCs: neural progenitor cells.
Fig. 4Polymer hydrogel supports the regeneration of the brain tissue. Stroke causes reactive astrocytes to inhibit the regeneration of the brain tissue. A polymeric hydrogel seeded with neural cells is surgically implanted into the cavity caused by the stroke. With time, the reactive astrocytes are mitigated and the host’s neurons can communicate with the cells seeded inside the hydrogel, reforming neural connections and restoring the original functions of the brain tissue
The main electroconductive polymers used in neural tissue engineering, biocompatibility in vitro/in vivo, and examples of their applications
| Electroconductive Polymer | Biocompatibility | Biocompatibility | Application | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Preclinical Studies | ||||
| PPy | PC12 | Electrospun nanofibers | [ | |
| PC12 | Rats | Films | [ | |
| PC12 | Rats | Nerve conduit | [ | |
| hNSCs | Rats | Hydrogel | 185, 186] | |
| PC12 | Electrodes | [ | ||
| Auditory neurons from Albino-Wistar rats | Electrodes | [ | ||
| Primary murine cerebellar glial culture | Vehicle for drug delivery | [ | ||
| PC12 | Vehicle for drug delivery | [ | ||
| Rats | Vehicle for drug delivery | [ | ||
| PANi | PC12 | Electrospun nanofibres | [ | |
| Rats | Nerve conduit | [ | ||
| NSCs | Hydrogel | [ | ||
| PC12 | Hydrogel | [ | ||
| Rats | Electronic patch | [ | ||
| PEDOT | Rats | Electrodes | [ | |
| Mice | Electrodes | [ | ||
| Neurons from E18 Sprague- Dawley cortices | Electrodes | [ | ||
| Rats | Electrodes | [ | ||
| ReNcell VM | Substrate | [ | ||
| P19 | Substrate | [ | ||
| InP | Primary cell cultures from hippocampal regions of rats | Nanowire scaffolds | [ | |
PPy: polypyrrole; PANi: polyaniline; PEDOT: Poly (3,4-ethylenedioxythiopene); InP: indium phosphide; hNSCs: human neural stem cells; NSCs: neural stem cells.
The main carbon-based nanomaterials used in neural tissue engineering, biocompatibility in vitro/in vivo, and examples of their applications
| Electroconductive Polymer | Biocompatibility | Biocompatibility | Application | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Preclinical Studies | ||||
| Graphene | PC12 | Sheets | [ | |
| BV2 cells | Foam | [ | ||
| NSCs | Substrate | [ | ||
| NSCs | Rolled foam | [ | ||
| hNSCs | Nanogrids | [ | ||
| Rats and Mice | Electrode | [ | ||
| CNTs | NG108-15 | SWCNTs | [ | |
| Hippocampal neuronal cultures from Sprague-Dawley rats | SWCNTs | [ | ||
| Astrocytic cultures from C57BL/6 mice pups | SWCNTs | [ | ||
| NSCs | SWCNTs | [ | ||
| NSCs | MWCNTs | [ | ||
| Mice | MWCNTs | [ | ||
| PC12 | MWCNTs | [ | ||
| PC12 | Electrodes | [ | ||
| Rats | Electrodes | [ | ||
hNSCs: human neural stem cells; NCSs: neural stem cells; CNTs: carbon nanotubes; SWCNTs: single-walled carbon nanotubes; MWCNTs: multi-walled carbon nanotubes.