| Literature DB >> 31075723 |
Jianbin Xu1, Qian Feng2, Sien Lin3, Weihao Yuan4, Rui Li4, Jinming Li5, Kongchang Wei6, Xiaoyu Chen4, Kunyu Zhang4, Yanhua Yang7, Tianyi Wu7, Bin Wang7, Meiling Zhu7, Rui Guo8, Gang Li9, Liming Bian10.
Abstract
Hydrogels have been widely used as the carrier material of therapeutic cell and drugs for articular cartilage repair. We previously demonstrated a unique host-guest macromer (HGM) approach to prepare mechanically resilient, self-healing and injectable supramolecular gelatin hydrogels free of chemical crosslinking. In this work, we show that compared with conventional hydrogels our supramolecular gelatin hydrogels mediate more sustained release of small molecular (kartogenin) and proteinaceous (TGF-β1) chondrogenic agents, leading to enhanced chondrogenesis of the encapsulated human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (hBMSCs) in vitro and in vivo. More importantly, the supramolecular nature of our hydrogels allows injection of the pre-fabricated hydrogels containing the encapsulated hBMSCs and chondrogenic agents, and our data show that the injection process has little negative impact on the viability and chondrogenesis of the encapsulated cells and subsequent neocartilage development. Furthermore, the stem cell-laden supramolecular hydrogels administered via injection through a needle effectively promote the regeneration of both hyaline cartilage and subchondral bone in the rat osteochondral defect model. These results demonstrate that our supramolecular HGM hydrogels are promising delivery biomaterials of therapeutic agents and cells for cartilage repair via minimally invasive procedures. This unique capability of injecting cell-laden hydrogels to target sites will greatly facilitate stem cell therapies.Entities:
Keywords: Cartilage repair; Chondrogenic differentiation; Drug delivery; HGM hydrogel; Mesenchymal stem cells
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31075723 DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2019.04.031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomaterials ISSN: 0142-9612 Impact factor: 12.479