| Literature DB >> 35448112 |
Cosimo Ligorio1,2,3, Judith A Hoyland3, Alberto Saiani1,2.
Abstract
Low back pain (LBP), caused by intervertebral disc (IVD) degeneration, is a major contributor to global disability. In its healthy state, the IVD is a tough and well-hydrated tissue, able to act as a shock absorber along the spine. During degeneration, the IVD is hit by a cell-driven cascade of events, which progressively lead to extracellular matrix (ECM) degradation, chronic inflammation, and pain. Current treatments are divided into palliative care (early stage degeneration) and surgical interventions (late-stage degeneration), which are invasive and poorly efficient in the long term. To overcome these limitations, alternative tissue engineering and regenerative medicine strategies, in which soft biomaterials are used as injectable carriers of cells and/or biomolecules to be delivered to the injury site and restore tissue function, are currently being explored. Self-assembling peptide hydrogels (SAPHs) represent a promising class of de novo synthetic biomaterials able to merge the strengths of both natural and synthetic hydrogels for biomedical applications. Inherent features, such as shear-thinning behaviour, high biocompatibility, ECM biomimicry, and tuneable physiochemical properties make these hydrogels appropriate and functional tools to tackle IVD degeneration. This review will describe the pathogenesis of IVD degeneration, list biomaterials requirements to attempt IVD repair, and focus on current peptide hydrogel materials exploited for this purpose.Entities:
Keywords: intervertebral disc; self-assembling peptide hydrogels; tissue engineering
Year: 2022 PMID: 35448112 PMCID: PMC9028266 DOI: 10.3390/gels8040211
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gels ISSN: 2310-2861
Figure 1(A) Graphical representation of adjacent vertebral units in sagittal view. Each unit consists of vertebral bodies surrounding an IVD. The nerve supply of the IVD and vertebral bodies consists of the spinal cord disposed longitudinally along the vertebrae and passing through the intervertebral foramen. Vertebrae are kept in place by anterior and posterior ligaments. (B) Schematic representation of the IVD, showing the NP, AF, and CEP regions.
Figure 2Schematic representation of the human IVD, showing its water and ECM content. The IVD is surrounded by blood and nerve vessels. Capillaries penetrate a few millimetres into the outer AF to provide nutrients and waste exchange. Cells from the avascular NP and inner AF receive nutrients and are able to exchange waste products through a bidirectional flow occurring via blood capillaries that penetrate the subchondral plate and reach the CEP.
Figure 3Macroscopic and microscopic changes of the IVD during degeneration. Characteristic changes of the NP’s ECM after degeneration are illustrated in the dashed circles. ECM of degenerated discs (dashed red circle) shows shorter aggrecan macromolecules and more collagen type I fibres (thicker fibre bundles) than collagen type II (thinner collagen bundles), which are largely abundant in the ECM of healthy discs (dashed green circle).
Morphological features and Pfirrmann grading system of IVD degeneration.
| Grade | Structure Colour | NP/AF Distinction | Signal Intensity | IVD Height |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | Homogenous, | Clear | Hyperintense | Normal |
| II | Inhomogeneous, opaque | Clear | Hyperintense | Normal |
| III | Inhomogeneous and grey | Unclear | Intermediate | Normal to slightly decreased |
| IV | Inhomogeneous, | Lost | Intermediate to Hypointense | Normal to moderately decreased |
| V | Inhomogeneous, black | Lost | Hypointense | Collapse of disc space |
Figure 4Comparison between different stages of intervertebral disc degeneration (I to V, left to right) according to the Pfirrmann grade scale based on MRI images. Reprinted and adapted with permission from Ref. [103]. Copyright 2022, Elsevier.
Summary of advantages and disadvantages of natural vs. synthetic hydrogels.
| Hydrogels | Relevant Examples | Main Advantages | Main Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| Natural | Hyaluronic Acid, alginate, chitosan, fibrin, gelatin, | Biodegradable | Poor mechanical properties |
| Synthetic | poly(N-isopropylacrylamide), poly(ethylene glycol), | Tuneable mechanical properties and shapes | Lack of cell-recognition sites |
Figure 5List of 20 natural amino acids. For each amino acid, its 3-letter abbreviation, 1-letter code, and property (‘hydrophobic’, ‘negatively charged’, ‘positively charged’, ‘hydrophilic, uncharged’, and ‘other’) are provided. Cys, Gly, and Pro are listed as ‘other’ since they have specific roles in peptide self-assembly that cannot be associated with the other properties listed.
Figure 6Beta-sheet and beta-hairpin peptide system designs. (A) Schematic representation of β-sheet-forming peptide hydrogel formation. Peptide sequences under external stimuli (e.g., pH, enzyme, temperature, light, time) self-assemble into β-sheet fibrils and fibres, which above a critical gelation concentration entrap water in water-swollen networks, i.e., hydrogels. (B) Detail of a β-sheet-forming polypeptide (i) reacting in water with another polypeptide via stacking of hydrophobic regions (ii). (C) Design of a β-hairpin sequence (i.e., MAX1), in which two valine-based peptides are linked together by a -VDPPT- turn. This tetrapeptide based on D-isomer valine induces a trans-prolyl amide bond re-arrangement favouring the β-hairpin formation. (D) Folding/self-assembly pathways of β-hairpins. Adapted with permission from Ref. [200]. Copyright 2022, American Chemical Society.
Figure 7Coiled-coil and α-helix barrel peptide system designs. (A) Heptad wheel representation of parallel and anti-parallel coiled coils. Supramolecular structures form due to the interactions occurring between ‘a’ and ‘d’ (usually hydrophobic), while ‘g’ and ‘e’ (usually charged) stabilise the assembly. (B) Larger coiled-coil structures form α-helical barrels (αHBs) with accessible central channels. From right (red) to left (blue), X-ray crystal structures of multiple pentameric to nonameric αHBs. Images were adapted with permission from Ref. [206]. Copyright 2022, Royal Society of Chemistry.
Figure 8Examples of short aromatic and peptide amphiphile designs. (A) Chemical structures of Fmoc-FF and Fmoc-RGD assembling into nanofibrils with RGD sequences on the fibre surface. (B) Example of a PA sequence consisting of a hydrophobic tail, a β-forming segment, an ionisable motif, and a hydrophilic bioactive epitope. Self-assembled PAs show bioactive epitope on the surface (green appendages) and hydrophobic tails in the core (dark grey). Reprinted and adapted with permission from Ref. [223]. Copyright 2022, Elsevier.
Figure 9Representative studies employing peptide-based hydrogels for IVD-repair applications. (A) PA structures mimicking collagen fibres for IVD applications. MSCs cultured on PA nanofibres showed successful differentiation after 14 days and abundant GAG deposition (Safranin O and Alcian Blue stainings shown). (B) Self-assembly and formulation of GO-containing F8 hydrogels. TGF-β3-coated GO-F8 hydrogels showed increased gene and protein expression of NP cells after 3 weeks of 3D culture; *** p-value < 0.001. Reprinted and adapted with permission from Refs. [233,234]. Copyright 2022, Elsevier. Reprinted and adapted with permission from [236]. Copyright 2022, American Chemical Society.
Studies reporting the use of peptide hydrogels as 3D scaffolds for IVD repair.
| Hydrogel | Injectable? | Cell Type | Duration | Outcomes | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RKP (RADA16 functionalised with KPSS) | N/A | Human NP-derived stem cells | 2 days | High cell proliferation and upregulation of the gene expression of collagen II, aggrecan, and Sox-9 compared to controls | [ |
| RADA16:RADA-KPSS in 1:1 ratio | Yes | Human MSCs | 14 days | Hydrogels promoted cell proliferation and chemotaxis as well as kept cell viability up to 14 days once injected into an ex vivo cultured disc mode | [ |
| RAD-RKP (co-assembly of RADA16 with RKP) | Yes | Degenerated human NP cells | 28 days | High cell proliferation and migration. Collagen type II, SOX9, and aggrecan were upregulated, while collagen I was downregulated compared to controls | [ |
| LN-NS (co-assembly of link N-conjugated RADA16 with RADA16) | Yes | Rabbit NP cells | 14 days | High viability and cell adhesion. Increased gene expression of PGs and collagen type II compared to controls | [ |
| LN-NS (1:1 mixture of link N-conjugated RADA16 with RADA16) | Yes | Rabbit Notochordal Cells | 14 days | High cell survival rate. Increased gene expression of aggrecan and collagen type II compared to controls | [ |
| KLD12 | Yes | Rabbit NP cells | 14 days | Increased GAG and collagen type II production over time. NP cells preserved high viability and characteristic shape | [ |
| KLD12/TGF-β1 | N/A | Rabbit MSCs | 14 days | High cell viability over time. Increased gene expression and protein deposition of aggrecan and collagen type II compared to controls | [ |
| FEFEFKFK | Yes | Bovine NP Cells | 14 days | Characteristic morphology and high viability over time. Upregulation of collagen type II, aggrecan, cytokeratin-8, cytokeratin-18, SOX9, and FOXF1, CA12 | [ |
| FEFKFEFK-GO | Yes | Bovine NP cells | 7 days | Increased viability of NP cells and stable metabolic activity over time | [ |
| FEFKFEFK-(GO + TGF-β3) | Yes | Bovine NP cells | 21 days | TGF-β3-decorated GO flakes induced increased gene expression and matrix deposition over time compared to TGF-β3 ‘free’ in peptide hydrogels or added exogenously. SMAD signalling was preserved when TGF-β3 was anchored on GO flakes, inducing ECM production | [ |
| Ac-ID3, Ac-LD6, Ac-AD6 | N/A | Porcine NP cells | 2 days | Porcine NP cells showed good viability when incubated with peptides | [ |
| Col-PA/E-PA (PA hydrogel decorated with collagen-mimic POG motif) | Yes | Rat MSCs | 14 days | [ | |
| PuraMatrix® | Yes | Human MSCs | 21 days | High deposition of GAGs accompanied by fast stress relaxation and mechanical properties mimicking native NP tissue | [ |
| Elastin-like polypeptide/thiol-modified hyaluronan | Yes | Human IVD cells | 21 days | High cell viability and maintenance of anabolic cell phenotype. Good biocompatibility in a preclinical rabbit annular puncture model | [ |
| P11-4, P11-8, P11-9, | Yes | Ex vivo bovine caudal spine model | 1 day | Hybrid hydrogels showed mechanical properties similar to the human NP. Hydrogels injected in a caudal spine model undergo gelation in situ with minimal leakage over time | [ |