grant

A Bio-inspired Latent TGF-beta Conjugated Scaffold for Patient-specific Cartilage Regeneration

Organization BOSTON UNIVERSITY (CHARLES RIVER CAMPUS)Location BOSTON, UNITED STATESPosted 1 Jun 2022Deadline 31 May 2027
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY2025AccelerationAnabolismAnimalsAutograftAutologousAutologous TransplantationAutotransplantBindingBioreactorsBody TissuesBone-Derived Transforming Growth FactorCartilageCartilaginous TissueCell BodyCell FractionCell FunctionCell PhysiologyCell ProcessCell-Extracellular MatrixCellsCellular FunctionCellular MorphologyCellular PhysiologyCellular ProcessChondrocytesClinicalDefectDegenerative ArthritisDegenerative polyarthritisDevelopmentDiarthrosisDiffuseDiffusionDoseECMEncapsulatedEngineeringEnvironmentEnzyme GeneEnzymesEquilibriumExhibitsExposure toExtracellular MatrixFailureFamily suidaeFibrocartilagesFibrosisGeneralized GrowthGenerationsGrowthGrowth AgentsGrowth FactorGrowth SubstancesHealthHumanHyaline CartilageHyperplasiaHyperplasticHypertrophyImplantIn SituIn VitroIntegrinsIntegrins Extracellular MatrixKineticsMechanicsMediatorMethodsMilk Growth FactorModelingModern ManMolecularMolecular InteractionMorphologyOsteoarthritisOsteoarthrosisOutcomePathogenicityPathologicPathologyPatientsPenetrationPerformancePhasePhenotypePhysiologicPhysiologicalPigsPlatelet Transforming Growth FactorPopulationProcessProteins Growth FactorsProtocolProtocols documentationReactionRegenerative MedicineResidualResidual stateSeriesSiteSourceStressSubcellular ProcessSuidaeSupplementationSwineSynovial jointSynovitisSystemTGF BTGF-betaTGF-βTGFbetaTGFβTimeTissue EngineeringTissue GraftsTissue GrowthTissue constructsTissuesTransforming Growth Factor betaTransforming Growth Factor-Beta Family GeneTransplantationarticular cartilageautologous graftautotransplantationbalancebalance functionbioengineered tissuebiomaterial scaffoldbioscaffoldbiosynthesiscartilage developmentcartilage regenerationcartilage repaircartilaginouscell morphologychemical reactioncomputer based predictiondegenerative joint diseasedesigndesigningdetermine efficacydevelopmentaldiffuseddiffusesdiffusingdiffusionsefficacy analysisefficacy assessmentefficacy determinationefficacy evaluationefficacy examinationengineered tissueevaluate efficacyexamine efficacyexpectationexperimentexperimental researchexperimental studyexperimentsfibrocartilaginoushydrogel scaffoldhypertrophic arthritisimplantationimprovedin vivoindividual patientinflamed synovial tissueinflamed synoviuminnovateinnovationinnovativemechanicmechanicalmechanical propertiesmicrobioreactornovelontogenyosteochondralosteochondral tissueporcinepredictive modelingrepairrepairedscaffoldscaffoldingsuccesssuidsynovial inflammationtissue graftingtissue repairtransplanttreatment strategy
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Full Description

Summary
Transforming growth factor beta (TGF-) has become one of the most widely utilized mediators to promote

cartilage growth in tissue engineering (TE) applications. Conventionally, for in vitro culture phases, TGF- is

supplemented in the culture medium with the expectation that it will readily diffuse into tissues and promote

the biosynthesis of a healthy cartilage ECM. However, a growing body of evidence brings to light a central

paradox with this conventional TGF- delivery strategy: physiologic TGF- doses exhibit limited penetration

into the tissue, giving rise to undesirable non-uniform growth, while the alternative use of higher,

supraphysiologic TGF- doses promotes the formation of cartilage with compromised tissue quality (e.g.,

fibrosis, hypertrophy, hyperplasia). In contrast to conventional TE TGF- delivery strategies, the natural

process of TGF- delivery in native cartilage occurs quite differently, where chondrocytes are surrounded by

large stores of TGF- that are sequestered in an inactive form, termed latent TGF- (LTGF-). Chondrocytes

activate LTGF- stores via integrins or secreted enzymes, leading to highly advantageous, need-based

activity throughout the tissue, which allows for essential ECM biosynthesis while avoiding the induction of

pathological tissue formation.

This proposal capitalizes on this native regulatory mechanism by creating a bio-inspired TE strategy,

whereby chondrogenic cells are encapsulated in a hydrogel scaffold conjugated with large stores of LTGF-,

akin to the native environment. This platform allows cells to endogenously activate these LTGF- stores,

giving rise to the highly beneficial delivery of uniform and moderated, near-physiologic TGF- doses to cells,

which promote biosynthetic enhancements in the absence of tissue quality limitations.

Further, a novel reaction-diffusion modeling framework is developed to predict the activity of TGF-

exposed to cells in constructs while accounting for the critical patient-specific chemical reactions applied to

TGF- in the tissue. These patient-specific models can guide optimal LTGF- design parameters, allowing for

optimal activity doses and giving rise to improved TE cartilage quality and mitigation of pathogenic off-target

desorption of TGF- from the construct.

In the current project, we examine the efficacy of this bio-inspired LTGF- scaffold platform by assessing:

1) the capability of reaction-diffusion models to optimize growth outcomes in patient-specific cell populations

(human chondrocytes and MSCs), 2) the capability of model-optimized LTGF- scaffolds to improve TE

cartilage performance in the hostile mechanochemical environment of the OA synovial joint through use of an

ex vivo synovial joint bioreactor, and 3) the capability of LTGF- scaffolds to improve TE cartilage performance

in an in vivo porcine focal defect model.

Grant Number: 5R01AR078299-04
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Michael Albro

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