| Literature DB >> 34677210 |
Minjee Kang1, Chung-Sung Lee2, Min Lee1,3.
Abstract
With population aging and increased life expectancy, an increasing number of people are facing musculoskeletal health problems that necessitate therapeutic intervention at defect sites. Bone tissue engineering (BTE) has become a promising approach for bone graft substitutes as traditional treatments using autografts or allografts involve clinical complications. Significant advancements have been made in developing ideal BTE scaffolds that can integrate bioactive molecules promoting robust bone repair. Herein, we review bioactive scaffolds tuned for local bone regenerative therapy, particularly through integrating synthetic liposomal vesicles or extracellular vesicles to the scaffolds. Liposomes offer an excellent drug delivery system providing sustained release of the loaded bioactive molecules. Extracellular vesicles, with their inherent capacity to carry bioactive molecules, are emerging as an advanced substitute of synthetic nanoparticles and a novel cell-free therapy for bone regeneration. We discuss the recent advance in the use of synthetic liposomes and extracellular vesicles as bioactive materials combined with scaffolds, highlighting major challenges and opportunities for their applications in bone regeneration. We put a particular focus on strategies to integrate vesicles to various biomaterial scaffolds and introduce the latest advances in achieving sustained release of bioactive molecules from the vesicle-loaded scaffolds at the bone defect site.Entities:
Keywords: bone regeneration; bone tissue engineering; drug delivery system; exosome; extracellular vesicle; liposome; scaffold
Year: 2021 PMID: 34677210 PMCID: PMC8533541 DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering8100137
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioengineering (Basel) ISSN: 2306-5354
Figure 1Scheme of functionalized liposomes used in bone regeneration applications. For efficacious bone repair, liposomes have been tailored to release drugs in a controlled manner, to hold active targeting moieties, and to be stimuli-responsive.
Summary of cross-linking methods used to integrate liposomes to scaffolds for bone regeneration.
| Drug | Liposome Composition | Scaffold | Cross-Linking Method | Notes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plasmid DNA encoding RUNX2 | DODAP, HSPC, Cholesterol, and DSPE-PEG or DSPE-PEG-Mal | Polycaprolactone nanofiber meshes | Thioether linkage of maleimide and thiol group | Osteogenic activities in human bone-marrow mesenchymal stem cells in vitro | [ |
| Dexamethasone | DODAP, HSPC, Cholesterol, and DSPE-PEG or DSPE-PEG-Mal | Polycaprolactone nanofiber meshes | Thioether linkage of maleimide and thiol group | Osteogenic activities in human bone-marrow mesenchymal stem cells in vitro | [ |
| Noggin siRNA | Stearylamine and cholesterol | Methacrylated glycol chitosan hydrogel | Encapsulation | Osteogenic and bone regeneration activities in vitro and in vivo | [ |
| Phenamil and Noggin siRNA | Stearylamine and cholesterol | Methacrylated glycol chitosan hydrogel | Encapsulation | Osteogenic and bone regeneration activities in vitro and in vivo | [ |
| 20(s)-hydroxycholesterol and Plasmid DNA encoding sonic hedgehog | Palmitic acid and 20(s)-hydroxycholesterol | Porous hydroxyapatite-coated PLGA scaffold | Electrostatic interaction of alendronate and apatite | Osteogenic and bone regeneration activities in vitro and in vivo | [ |
| Kartogenin | Lecithin and cholesterol | Gelatin methacryloyl hydrogel | Encapsulation via the physical network hindrance and non-covalent interaction | Extended joint retention, in vitro chondrogenic activities, and therapeutic effects in osteoarthritis model in vivo | [ |
| Dexamethasone | (N-{6-amino-1-[N-(9Z) -octadec9-enylamino] -1-oxohexan-(2S) -2- | Glass coverslips, gold sensors, and | Layer-by-Layer coating with polyethyleneimine, collagen type I, chondroitin sulfate, and liposome | Enhanced adhesion and osteogenic differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts in vitro | [ |
| Salvianic acid A | Lecithin, cholesterol, and cholesterol-pyrophosphate | Collagen sponge | Absorption | Improved bone healing via the regulation of HDAC3-mediated endochondral ossification in rabbit segmental defect model | [ |
| Deferoxamine and BMP-2 | Phosphatidylcholin | Gelatin methacryloyl hydrogel | Hydrogen bond and hydrogel network micro-cross-linking | Enhanced mechanical property by liposome encapsulation, controlled phase release of various type of drugs, osteogenesis, angiogenesis, mature lamella bone formation in vivo | [ |
| Deferoxamine | Lecithin and cholesterol | Gelatin methacryloyl hydrogel and 3D printed bioceramic scaffold | Encapsulation | Designed biomimetic ‘lotus’ biological structure, increased the expression of vascularization, and pro-osteogenic effects in vitro/in vivo | [ |
| Curcumin | 1,2-dimyristoylsn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC) and 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phospho-(1′-rac-glycerol) (sodium salt) (DMPG) | 3D printed calcium phosphate scaffolds | Absorption and ionic interaction | Cytotoxic against in vitro | [ |
| 20(s)-hydroxycholesterol | Stearylamine and 20(s)-hydroxycholesterol | Methacrylated glycol chitosan hydrogel | Encapsulation | Designed non-phospholipid liposome, named sterosome, which has intrinsic osteoinductivity, and enhanced osteogenic activities in vitro and bone formation in vivo via hedgehog signaling | [ |
| 20(s)-hydroxycholesterol and purmorphamine | Stearylamine and 20(s)-hydroxycholesterol | Porous PLGA scaffold | Polydopamine-mediated layer-by-layer coating (Schiff base formation and Michael-type addition) | Osteogenic activities in vitro and bone formation in vivo via hedgehog signaling | [ |
| 20(s)-hydroxycholesterol and smoothened agonist (SAG) | Stearylamine and 20(s)-hydroxycholesterol | Porous hydroxyapatite-coated PLGA scaffold | Polydopamine-mediated layer-by-layer coating (Schiff base formation and Michael-type addition) | Osteogenic activities in vitro and bone formation in vivo via hedgehog signaling | [ |
| Aspirin and bone forming peptide-1 | DSPE-PEG-NH2, 1,2- dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC), and cholesterol | 3D printed polycaprolactone scaffold | Polydopamine-mediated coating | Osteogenic activities in vitro and bone formation in vivo via PI3K/AKT signaling | [ |
| Aspirin | DSPE-PEG-NH2, DPPC, and cholesterol | 3D printed polycaprolactone scaffold | Polydopamine-mediated coating | Osteogenic activities in vitro and ectopic bone formation in vivo | [ |
| BMP-2 peptide | HSPC or DPPC, Cholesterol, and mPEG-DSPE-maleimide | Electrospun poly L-lactic acid nanofibers | Thioether linkage of maleimide and thiol group | Sustained release of BMP-2 peptide up to 21 days, enhanced in vitro osteogenic activities, and initiated ectopic bone formation | [ |
| 107–111 pentapeptide of the parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP 107-111) | MSPC, DSPE-PEG-maleimide, and DPPC | Collagen-hydroxyapatite scaffolds | Thioether linkage of maleimide and thiol group | Triggered release of PTHrP 107-111 by thermal stimulation and enhanced pro-osteogenic activities in vitro | [ |
| N′-Dodecanoylisonicotinohydrazide | Phospholipid | PLGA-PEG-PLGA hydrogel | Encapsulation | Developed a liposome-in-hydrogel and sustained drug release | [ |
| Carboxyfluorescein, doxorubicin, and lysozyme; not for bone tissue engineering | DSPC, cholesterol, and DSPE-PEG or DSPE-PEG-thiol bisphosphonate | Collagen-hydroxyapatite scaffolds | Electrostatic interaction of bisphosphonate and apatite | Increased affinity to the scaffold and sustained drug release | [ |
| BMP-2 | Lecithin, cholesterol, and octadecylamine | PEG and Ag ion hydrogel | Encapsulation | Promoted osteogenic differentiation in vitro and local bone remodeling of osteoporotic fracture in vivo because of increased localization efficacy at injected site | [ |
| CKIP-1 siRNA | DOTAP, DOPE, | Bovine bone scaffold | Electrostatic interaction | Osteogenic activities in vitro and bone repair in vivo via CKIP-1 knock down | [ |
Figure 2Schematics of signaling pathways explored in liposome-integrated scaffolds. (A) BMP/Smad signaling pathway. (B) Hedgehog signaling pathway. (C) PI3K/Akt signaling pathway.
Bone cell-derived EV-integrated biomaterial scaffolds for bone regeneration.
| Source of Exosomes | Pre-conditioning | Scaffold | In Vivo Model | Function of Exosome-Integrated Scaffolds | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| rBMSCs | OM | Alginate-PCL | Nude mouse subcutaneous bone formation model | Pro-angiogenic and pro-bone regeneration activities in vitro and in vivo. | [ |
| rBMSCs | OM | Decalcified bone matrix (DBM) | Nude mouse subcutaneous bone formation model | Pro-angiogenic and pro-bone regeneration activities in vitro and in vivo. | [ |
| hBMSCs | - | Gelatin methacrylate (GelMA) | Rabbit osteochondral defect model | Enhanced mitochondrial biogenesis in vitro and facilitated cartilage regeneration in vivo. | [ |
| hBMSCs | Hypoxia | Commercial HA scaffold | Rat calvarial defect model | Pro-angiogenic activities via AKT/mTOR pathway. | [ |
| hBMSCs | OM, Noggin Suppression | Injectable chitosan hydrogel | Mouse calvarial defect model | Elevated osteogenesis via inhibition of miR-29a in BMP/Smad signaling. | [ |
| hBMSCs | - | DBM | Rat subcutaneous implantation and Rabbit femoral condyle bone defect model | Human BMP2 plasmids were coated onto the vesicles. | [ |
| hBMSCs | - | Calcium sulfate/ | Femur neck canal defect model in osteoporotic rats | Enhanced bone formation in the absence of BMP. | [ |
| hBMSCs | OM | Titanium alloy | Rat radial bone defect model | Promoted osteogenic differentiation via PI3K/Akt and MAPK signaling pathways. | [ |
| rBMSCs | OM | Mesoporous bioactive glass (MBG) | Rat calvarial defect model | Osteoinductivity attributed to exosomal miRNAs (let-7a-5p, let-7c-5p, miR-328a-5p, and miR-31a-5p). | [ |
| hBMSCs | - | Titanium alloy | Osteoporotic bone defect model | miR-20a in hBMSC-EVs was shown to play a key role in promoting osteogenesis. | [ |
| hBMSCs | BMP2 overexpression | Alginate-RGD hydrogel | Rat calvarial defect model | EVs were tethered to biomaterial scaffolds with ECM proteins, which promoted bone repair and prolonged delivery in vivo. | [ |
| Preosteoblasts MC3T3 | - | Alginate hydrogel | - | Verified the osteogenic potential of MC3T3-derived EVs in vitro. | [ |
| Murine-derived macrophage | BMP2 stimulation | Titanium dioxide nanotubes | - | BMP2/macrophage-derived exosomes enhanced the osteogenic differentiation of MSCs in vitro. | [ |
| Osteoclast from osteoporotic rats | - | Magnetic nanoparticle-infiltrated hydroxyapatite | - | The presence of magnetic nanoparticles altered osteoclast-derived exosomal cargo and decreased the uptake efficiency of osteoclast exosomes in osteoblasts. | [ |
| Osteoclast from mice | - | DBM | Rat calvarial defect model | Elevated osteogenesis via miR-324 in ARHGAP1/RhoA/ROCK signaling. | [ |
rBMSCs: rat-derived bone marrow stem cells; hBMSCs: human-derived bone marrow stem cells; OM: osteoinductive medium; BMP: bone morphogenic protein; RGD: Arginylglycylaspartic acid.
Various stem cell-derived EV-integrated biomaterial scaffolds for bone regeneration.
| Source of Exosomes | Pre-Conditioning | Scaffold | In Vivo Model | Function of Exosome-Integrated Scaffolds | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| hASCs | OM | Polydopamine-coated PLGA | Rat calvarial defect model | Promoted proliferation, migration, and osteogenic differentiation of hBMSCs in vitro. | [ |
| hASCs | - | Biotin-doped polypyrrole titanium | Nude mouse subcutaneous bone formation model | Osteoinductive ability of hASC-EVs was evaluated via analysis of its content miRNAs. | [ |
| hASCs | - | CaSi-coated PLA | - | Enhanced osteogenic properties in vitro. | [ |
| hASCs | - | Silk fibroin | Rat calvarial defect model | Improved osteogenic differentiation of hBMSCs in vitro. | [ |
| Chondrogenic progenitor cells | - | Core-shell nanofiber film of CS/PLA | Rat calvarial defect model | VEGF plasmid DNA was sustainably delivered, resulting in elevated vascularized osteogenesis in vivo. | [ |
| Chondrogenic progenitor cells | - | 3D printed PCL scaffolds | Rat radial bone defect model | Osteogenic differentiation of hBMSCs in vitro. | [ |
| hiPSCs | - | Commercial β-TCP | Rat ovariectomized model | Enhanced angiogenesis and osteogenesis under osteoporotic conditions. | [ |
| hiPSCs | - | Commercial β-TCP | Rat calvarial defect model | Osteogenic differentiation of hBMSCs via PI3K/Akt signaling. | [ |
| hUCMSCs | - | Commercial hyaluronan-heparin hydrogel | Rat model of femoral fracture | HIF-1-mediated promotion of angiogenesis. | [ |
| hUCMSCs | CHA/SF/GCS/DF-PEG hydrogel | Rat femoral condyle bone defect model | Sustained delivery of exosomes at the bone defect sites. | [ | |
| hUCMSCs | - | Hyaluronic acid-alginate hydrogel with HAP | Rat calvarial defect model | Controlled delivery of exosomes at the bone defect sites. | [ |
| hUCMSCs | - | Hyaluronic acid hydrogel combined with customized HAP/poly-ε-caprolactone | Rat calvarial defect model | miR-21 is a potential intercellular messenger that promoted angiogenesis by upregulating the NOTCH1/DLL4 pathway. | [ |
| hGMSCs | - | PLLA scaffold | Rat calvarial defect model | Improved vascular network and osteogenic regeneration. | [ |
| hDPSCs | OM | PLLA scaffold | Nude mouse subcutaneous bone formation model | PLGA-PEG-PLGA triblock copolymer microsphere | [ |
| rDPSCs | - | Commercial collagen, β-TCP, or HA scaffold | Rat calvarial defect model | DPSC-EVs-loaded scaffold showed a comparable bone regeneration effect to the DSPC-loaded scaffolds. | [ |
| hSHED | - | β-TCP | Rat periodontal defect model | Periodontal bone regeneration through AMPK signaling. | [ |
ASC: adipose-derived stem cells; UCMSC: umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells; iPSC: induced pluripotent stem cells; OM: osteoinductive medium; PLGA: poly(lactide-co-glycolide); PLLA: poly(L-lactic acid); β-TCP: β-tricalcium phosphate; CHA: coralline hydroxyapatite; SF: silk fibroin; CS: chitosan; GCS: glycol chitosan; DF-PEG: difunctionalized polyethylene glycol; GMSC: gingival mesenchymal stem cell; SHED: stem cells from human exfoliated deciduous teeth.
Figure 3Schematics of different exosome loading methods to biomaterial scaffolds. (A) In case of post-solution adsorption, scaffolds are incubated in a solution containing exosomes, allowing physical adsorption of exosomes to the surface. (B) Exosomes can be loaded during in situ gelation of hydrogels, in which the pore network of hydrogel plays a critical role in retaining exosomes. (C) Addition of polymer layer onto biomaterial scaffold or encapsulation of exosomes inside polymer microspheres has been applied to advance the integration stability of exosomes to scaffolds. (D) Biotin-streptavidin complex was employed to better immobilize EVs onto the surface of titanium (Ti) scaffolds. The exosomal membrane as well as Ti scaffold surface were chemically modified to enable biotin-streptavidin binding. Panel (D) reproduced with permission of American Chemical Society [65]. Image produced with permission of BioRender.