| Literature DB >> 34012956 |
Dharshan Sivaraj1, Kellen Chen1, Arhana Chattopadhyay1, Dominic Henn1, Wanling Wu1, Chikage Noishiki1, Noah J Magbual1, Smiti Mittal1, Alana M Mermin-Bunnell1, Clark A Bonham1, Artem A Trotsyuk1, Janos A Barrera1, Jagannath Padmanabhan1, Michael Januszyk1, Geoffrey C Gurtner1.
Abstract
Cutaneous wounds are a growing global health burden as a result of an aging population coupled with increasing incidence of diabetes, obesity, and cancer. Cell-based approaches have been used to treat wounds due to their secretory, immunomodulatory, and regenerative effects, and recent studies have highlighted that delivery of stem cells may provide the most benefits. Delivering these cells to wounds with direct injection has been associated with low viability, transient retention, and overall poor efficacy. The use of bioactive scaffolds provides a promising method to improve cell therapy delivery. Specifically, hydrogels provide a physiologic microenvironment for transplanted cells, including mechanical support and protection from native immune cells, and cell-hydrogel interactions may be tailored based on specific tissue properties. In this review, we describe the current and future directions of various cell therapies and usage of hydrogels to deliver these cells for wound healing applications.Entities:
Keywords: cell therapy; fibrosis; hydrogel; stem cell; wound healing
Year: 2021 PMID: 34012956 PMCID: PMC8126987 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2021.660145
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
FIGURE 1Three stages of wound repair. The three phases of wound repair consist of (A) inflammation, (B) new tissue formation, and (C) remodeling. (A) The inflammatory phase lasts until about 48 h after injury. Depicted is a skin wound at about 24–48 h after injury. The wound is characterized by a hypoxic (ischemic) environment in which a fibrin clot has formed. Bacteria, neutrophils, and platelets are abundant in the wound. Normal skin appendages (such as hair follicles and sweat duct glands) are still present in the skin outside the wound. (B) New tissue formation occurs about 2–10 days after injury. Depicted is a skin wound at about 5–10 days after injury. The majority of cells from the previous stage of repair have migrated from the wound, and new blood vessels now populate the area. An eschar (scab) has formed on the surface of the wound, and the migration of epithelial cells can be observed under the eschar. (C) Remodeling lasts for a year or longer. Depicted is a skin wound about 1–12 months after repair. Disorganized collagen has been laid down by fibroblasts that have migrated into the wound and contracted the wound. The re-epithelialized wound is slightly higher than the surrounding surface, and the healed region does not contain normal skin appendages. Figure adapted with permission from Figure 1 of Gurtner et al. (2008).
FIGURE 2Overview of wound healing. (A) After an initial wound, both circulating and tissue resident cells are recruited to the wound, including fibroblasts and inflammatory cells. (B) Chronic wounds are characterized by interruptions and subsequent prolongation of the wound healing process. (C) Fibrotic wounds are characterized by upregulation of myofibroblast differentiation and increased collagen production and may be driven by mechanical signaling. aSMA, alpha smooth muscle actin.
Cell therapies tested for wound healing.
| Keratinocytes | – May be harvested from a skin biopsy and expanded in culture to form a large sheet of epidermis that improves wound closure and epithelialization | – Unable to produce a robust extracellular matrix – Efficacy reduced in chronic wounds compared to acute wounds | |
| – Efficacy reduced in chronic wounds compared to acute wounds | |||
| Fibroblasts | – Directly deposit extracellular matrix proteins | – Allogeneic fibroblast treatments have shown reduction in cell cryopreservation viability by almost 50% and inhibits protein production by 70–98% | |
| – Shown to treat facial defects following skin cancer resection with minimal scar formation | |||
| Macrophages and monocytes | – Improves rate of murine wound healing in both wild-type and diabetic mice, with no adverse effect on the quality of repair. – Increased angiogenesis in mice | – Did not improve the quality of the healed tissue in terms of tensile strength, scar formation, or collagen density | |
| ASCs | – Easily obtained in large quantities | – No consensus on a common isolation protocol that is clinically feasible, and which would ensure reproducible results | |
| – Shown to improve wound healing by promoting angiogenesis, secreting paracrine signaling molecules and extracellular matrices, and differentiating along multiple cell lineages | |||
| – Multifaceted ability to respond to the changing wound healing phases | |||
| Bone marrow MSCs (BM-MSCs) | – Capacity to differentiate into multiple cell types | – High donor site morbidity and low yield | |
| – Reduce inflammation by diminishing cytokine expression and inflammatory cell chemotaxis | – Require | ||
| – Promote neovascularization and recruit endogenous stem cells to the wound site | – Harvesting BM-MSCs is painful with donor site morbidity | ||
| Umbilical cord-derived MSCs (UC-MSCs) | – Easily derived from the umbilical cord | – Requires significant | |
| – Great rate of self-renewal | – Suffer from extensive phenotypic drift | ||
| – Primitive stem cells, with greater proliferative and immunosuppressive capabilities compared to other MSCs |
FIGURE 3Sources of stem cells to be used as cellular therapies. (A) Adipose-derived stem cells (ASCs) can be harvested from either lipoaspirate or fat tissue. These cells (or MSCs) can then be cultured in vitro, expanded in number, and then delivered to the wound as a cell therapy. To enhance the cell delivery, several delivery techniques (shown later) may be used. (B) Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) can be harvested from either the umbilical cord or the bone marrow.
Different scaffolds to deliver cell therapies for wound healing.
| Alginate hydrogel | – Mechanical properties of hydrogel can be tuned | – Limited long-term stability in physiologic conditions | |
| – Establish a robust microenvironment for cells | – Must be modified with an adhesive ligand | ||
| Collagen hydrogel | – Primary organic constituent of native ECM | – Damage to its covalent cross-links upon extraction weakens hydrogels, which can then disintegrate on handling or under the pressure of surrounding tissues | |
| – Highly biocompatible and cytocompatible, amenable to cell adhesion without modification | |||
| Fibrin hydrogel | – Natural role as a matrix involved in hemostasis and wound healing | – Fibrin can be especially susceptible to protease-mediated degradation | |
| – Can trigger encapsulated cells to secrete ECM components and reparative growth factors | |||
| Hyaluronic acid (HA) hydrogel | – Chemical tunability | – In modifications like cross-linked HA-aldehyde or HA-amine derivatives, there are disadvantages: the modification procedure involves many synthesis and purification steps, and the crosslinking chemistries that occur upon mixing are hard to control and yield inconsistent gels | |
| – Favorable mechanical properties, biocompatibility, and biodegradation capacity | |||
| Poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) | – Fosters viability and proliferation of seeded ASCs | – Poor biocompatibility | |
| Poly-(ethylene glycol) (PEG) | – Versatility in chemical modification and ability to finely tune mechanical properties | – Synthesized in combination with natural polymers or biomimetic peptides as lack the biochemical properties for cellular interaction | |
| Poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) | – Extensively studied | – Poor biocompatibility | |
| – One of the most widely used polymers for materials science engineering applications | – Challenging to fixate within wound bed | ||
| Poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) | – Highly crosslinked gels possess longer degradation times | – In general, highly crosslinked gels possess longer degradation times | |
| Pullulan-collagen hydrogel | – Best approximate the porous ultrastructure of native reticular ECM | – It is possible that the hydrogel microenvironment is hypoxic | |
| – Easy engineering of the mechanical properties | |||
| – Able to support the growth of multiple cell types | |||
| – Minimal rejection and favorable biomaterial-tissue integration | |||
| Gelatin hydrogel | – Excellent biocompatibility | – Accelerated biodegradation compared to other hydrogels | |
| – Ease of chemical modification | – Variation between synthesized bathes | ||
| – Weak mechanical properties |
FIGURE 4Benefits of using a hydrogel dressing to deliver cellular therapies. (A) Open wounds are at risk for desiccation (loss of moisture) and bacterial infection, as well either underhealing or overhealing. (B) To address these major risk factors, hydrogel dressings provide coverage and moisture, as well as a beneficial ECM environment for cells to grow in. (C) Once the hydrogel has been seeded with cells, it can be laid on the wound to promote healing and regeneration.
FIGURE 5Pullulan-collagen hydrogel can be easily modified across a wide range of factors and provides biocompatibility with stem cells. (A–F) Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) imaging demonstrates that varying collagen and KCl concentrations significantly alters the porosity of the hydrogels. Hydrogels fabricated with KCl showed increased porosity, while increasing collagen concentrations decreased porosity. Scale bar 100 μm. (G,H) Brightfield imaging and fluorescent imaging of live (green) dead (red/yellow) stain shows successful in vitro cellular incorporation of MSCs in the hydrogels. Scale bar 50 μm. (I) SEM shows MSCs (arrows) viably incorporated within the pullulan-collagen hydrogels. Scale bar 25 μm. Figures adapted with permission from Figures 2, 6 of Wong et al. (2011b).
FIGURE 6Hydrogel with cellular therapy promotes wound healing. Hydrogel delivery system serves as a physiologic milieu to encapsulate cells to ensure efficient delivery to wound site. Cells such as MSCs or ASCs may be seeded into the hydrogels. Upon application to the wound, cells migrate into the wound to initiate a cascade of beneficial phenotypes.