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TISSUE ENGINEERING

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Title: TISSUE ENGINEERING


1
TISSUE ENGINEERING Soft Tissue Biomaterials
Alyssa Panitch Harrington Department of
Bioengineering Arizona State University
2
Soft Tissue Engineering
  • Biology and materials
  • Historical perspective
  • Proteins, polysaccharides, cells and tissues
  • Examples of biologically interactive biomaterials

3
(No Transcript)
4
What Issues Need to Be Considered?
  • How does the body respond to the material?
  • Molecular level
  • Cellular level
  • Surface features/chemistry matter

5
What Issues Need to Be Considered?
  • How does the material respond to the body?
  • Surface rearrangement
  • Erosion
  • Degradation
  • Chemical and mechanical failure

6
Historical PerspectiveCurrently Used Biomaterials
  • Silicone Rubber Catheters, tubing
  • Dacron Vascular Grafts
  • Teflon Catherters, Vascular Grafts
  • PMMA Intraoccular Lenses, Bone Cement
  • Polyurethanes Catheters, Pace Makers
  • Carbon Heart Valves
  • Stainless Steel Orthopedic Devices
  • Titanium Orthopedic Devices, Dental
  • Hydroxy Apatite Orthopedic Devices
  • Collagen Burns, Sponges

Ratner, JBMR, 27, 1993
7
Wheres the Engineering?
  • Traditionally, the body responds to all materials
    the same way
  • Recognized as non-self and walled off
  • No longer able to interact with the body to
    induce tissue regeneration
  • May act as mechanical support or structural
    replacement

8
Protein Adsorption
  • Plasma Contains over 200 different proteins
  • Vroman effect different proteins adsorbed to
    surface over time

9
Proteins and Interfaces
  • Vroman and Adams looked at protein adsorption
    from plasma on Ge, Pt, Si, Ta
  • Within 10s of exposure 6 nm thick layer of
    fibrinogen formed
  • Within 60s layer was less uniform, 12.5 nm
    mostly fibrinogen
  • Fibrinogen-340kDa plasma glycoprotein
  • Major protein component of clotting
  • Promotes platelet adhesion

Vroman and Adams, J. Biomed. Mat. Res. 3(1969)
669
10
Clotting and Biomaterials
  • Two pathways lead to clot formation
  • Intrinsic pathway is activated by damage to or
    change in vascular endothelium or exposure of
    blood to collagen
  • 7-12 minutes to form a soft clot
  • Extrinsic pathway is activated by Tissue
    Thrombospondin or a foreign body
  • 5-12 s to form a soft clot

11
Inhibiting Protein Adsorption
12
Complement - The Major Defense Clearance System
  • Can be activated through immunoglobulin
  • Or if a particle provides a site for amplified
    self-activation of the early activating
    components

13
Complement and Materials
  • Complement activating factor C3b is an opsonin
  • Opsonins, when bound to a surface promote
    adhesion of and activation of neutrophils and
    macrophages
  • Lead to frustrated phagocytosis

Frustrated Phagocytosis
Phagocytosis
14
Foreign Body Response
  • All materials elicit some level of foreign body
    response.
  • Fibroblasts secrete collagen
  • Wall off the object from the body
  • The thickness of the capsule depends on material
    properties.
  • Can we ensure that the desired response is faster
    than the undesired one?

15
Can We Engineer the Biological Response?
  • Not all materials are created equal
  • Clearly, Biology has found a way to develop
    materials, which support healing or regeneration
  • Can we tap into biology to deliver the
    appropriate clues for tissue regeneration?
  • Adhesion, migration, proliferation,
    differentiation, appropriate scaffold synthesis

16
What is it that we are trying to engineer?
  • Skin
  • Vasculature
  • Liver
  • Nervous tissue
  • Muscle
  • Cartilage
  • Ocular lenses
  • Others

17
Skin
18
Bone
19
Blood Vessel
20
Peripheral Nervous Tissue
21
What is a tissue?
  • Tissue is a blend or composite of materials
  • Cells
  • Proteins
  • Polysaccharides
  • Small molecules
  • Water (90)

22
What is a cell?
  • How does the cell interact with its environment?
  • Soluble factors
  • Extracellular matrix
  • Receptors

Cell
23
Extracellular Matrix (ECM)
  • Structural proteins
  • Collagen
  • Elastin
  • Specialized proteins
  • Fibronectin
  • Laminin
  • Proteoglycans
  • Glycosaminoglycans
  • Hyaluronic Acid
  • Chondroitin Sulfate
  • Heparin/Heparan Sulfate
  • Dermatan Sulfate

24
Basal Lamina
25
Amino Acid Structures
General Structure
Serine
Phenylalanine
Lysine
26
Amino Acids
27
Denatured Protein
Folded Protein
28
Nonstructural ECM Proteins
  • Contain several biological domains
  • Bind collagen and/or cells
  • Many bind to GAGs such as heparin or heparan
    sulfate

Schematic of Domains within Fibronectin
29
Polysaccharides
  • Many cell surface proteins are glycosylated
  • Affects protein function
  • Influence recognition by other proteins/cells
  • Most cells present heparan sulfate
  • Binds to many ECM proteins (e.g. fibronectin,
    collagen, growth factors)

30
Polysaccharides
  • ECM often is rich in polysaccharides
  • Sulfated/charged polysaccharides interact with
    water which provides beneficial mechanical
    properties
  • Provides compressive strength of collagen
  • Sequestering of growth factors/creation of
    chemical gradients

31
Polysaccharides
Heparin
Chondroitin Sulfate
Dextran Sulfate
32
What does a Cell see?
I spy
  • Difficult question to answer
  • Depends on tissue type
  • Maybe highly hydrated polysaccharide rich
    scaffold cartilage
  • Maybe dense, hard composite, bone
  • Collagen and hydroxyapatite
  • Certainly a complex milieu of both covalently
    linked and physically linked macromolecules

33
How do we design a material for tissue
engineering ?
  • Keep in mind that Dacron vascular grafts (gt0.6
    mm in diameter) work well
  • And PLGA has been used to create an acceptable
    skin substitute and as a controlled release
    vehicle
  • PGA is used for degradable sutures
  • Polyanhydrides are used for release of
    chemotherapeutic agents

34
How do we design a material for tissue
engineering?
  • With that said
  • Do we attempt to incorporate more biology?
  • Well see excellent examples of continued use of
    PLGA in the following talks
  • Do we design a scaffold that mimics that of a
    healthy form of the tissue to be replaced?
  • Or do we look to development?

35
Incorporation of biological signals
BSP Bone Sialoprotein
36
Biology is Selective and Precise
Orientation of ligand is critical for cell
adhesion and biological function
Massia and Hubbell, JBMR, 1991, 25223-42
37
Biology is Selective and Precise
  • Density of signal is important for function

Massia and Hubbell, J. Cell Biol, 1991,
1141089-1100
38
Degradable Materials
  • Polylactide, polyglycolide, etc. are
    hydrolytically degradable
  • Copolymers of varying monomer ratios degrade at
    different rates
  • Polyanhydrides also degrade hydrolytically

39
Degradable Polyanhydrides
  • Mugli, et al. synthesized polymers with varying
    ratios of sebasic acid and 1,6-bis(carboxyphenoxy)
    hexane
  • Degradation rates 2 days to 1 year
  • Mechanical properties 1.4 GPa to 0.14 GPa
  • Polyanhydrides are surface eroding
  • retained 70 of their mechanical integrity when
    50 of the materials has eroded

Mugli, BurKoth, and Anseth, JBMR, 1999, 46
271-278
40
Hydrogels
  • Materials that are composed of hydrophilic,
    cross-linked polymer chains
  • Have extremely high water content (often gt90)
  • Physicochemical properties can be tailored
  • Closely mimic mechanical properties of soft
    tissue
  • Can be modulated for specific tissue or
    application
  • May be polymerized into any desired geometry
  • Can even be gelled in situ
  • May be composed of degradable or non-degradable
    polymers

41
Some Unique Attributes of Hydrogels
  • High water content permits free diffusion of
    cellular nutrients and waste products
  • In situ polymerization possible
  • Facilitates localized delivery of the material
  • Gel conforms to the geometry of the wound or
    defect
  • Mechanisms of polymerization allow incorporation
    of bioactive signals or bioresponsive domains
  • Cellular growth or guidance cues
  • Enzymatic degradation domains

42
Hydrogels in Tissue Engineering
  • Interfacial barrier systems
  • Material provides physical barrier between target
    tissue and other tissue or external environment
  • Wound healing applications (dermal sealants,
    etc.)
  • Mitigates post-operative adhesion wounds
  • Can prevent thrombosis and restenosis subsequent
    to a vascular injury
  • Materials can be highly resistant to protein
    deposition and platelet adhesion

43
Hydrogels in Tissue Engineering
  • Drug delivery systems
  • Act as localized drug sequestration depots
  • Release kinetics can be controlled via
    physicochemical properties of the polymer
  • Cross-link density (pore size)
  • Degradation rate of matrix
  • Density of degradable domains/chains
  • In situ polymerization provides directed therapy
    precisely to target area

44
Hydrogels in Tissue Engineering
  • Cell encapsulation systems
  • Cells are included in pre-polymerization solution
    and the material is gelled around them
  • Provides immunoisolation
  • Gels are permeable to nutrients and waste
    products
  • Thus, cells are allowed to function normally
    while protected from host immune system

45
Hydrogels in Tissue Engineering
  • Tissue scaffold systems
  • Material acts a physical framework for cell
    attachment and proliferation
  • Mechanical properties may be customized for the
    native values for a particular tissue
  • Can be formed into any geometry
  • Scaffolds can be seeded with cells and
    pre-cultured prior to implantation
  • Degradable systems allow integration of newly
    formed native tissue

46
Bioactive Hydrogel Example Overview
  • Photoinitiated poly(vinyl alcohol) gels were used
    to encapsulate fibroblasts
  • Modified with RGD peptide to facilitate cell
    adhesion
  • Cell viability gt80 after two weeks
  • Youngs modulus for 15 and 30 gels
  • 15 wt gels 125 /- 13 kPa
  • 30 wt gels 838 /- 194 kPa

47
Biologically Degradable Materials
  • PEG hydrogels were designed to degrade in
    response to biological events
  • VRN plasmin degradation
  • APGL collagenase degradation

West and Hubbell, Macromolecules, 1999, 32(1)
241-244
48
Protein Sequences
100 Collagenase activity
ECSAVG
ECSAVG
ECSAVG
ECS
where
is PQGIAGQRGDSSIKVAVG
30 Collagenase activity
ECSAVG
ECSAVG
ECSAVG
ECS
where
is PDGIAGQRGDSSIKVAVG
49
Hydrogel Formation
  • 40 hydrogels
  • Proteins are dissolved in phosphate buffered
    saline with EDTA (? pH 8.0)
  • Molar ratios of cysteine groups to vinyl sulfone
    groups
  • Cross-linked with PEG-vinyl sulfone (8-arm) at
    37 for 15 min-2 hours via Michael addition

50
Mechanical Data
100 Collagenase activity
51
Degradation Data
52
Artificial ECM
Making use of heparin affinity
53
Heparin-Binding Peptides
Tyler-Cross et al. (1994). Prot. Sci. 3 620
Rusnati, M. et al. (1999). J. Biol. Chem. 274
28198. KD varies based on number of TAT bound
per heparin
54
Rheological Evaluation
1650 Pa at 100 rad/s





830 Pa at 25 rad/s
plt0.001
55
Release
plt0.005 plt0.0001





56
Examples of Materials Used in Nerve Regeneration
  • Grafts
  • Allografts
  • Xenografts
  • Low water content polymers
  • Poly(L-lactic acid) - poly(glycolic acid)
    co-polymers
  • Poly(pyrrole)
  • Silicone tubes
  • Hydrogels
  • Synthetic
  • Methyl cellulose
  • Acrylamide
  • Biological
  • Calcium-alginate
  • Agarose
  • Collagen
  • Fibrin
  • Laminin
  • Hyaluronic acid

57
Fibrin Gels for Nerve Regeneration
  • Fibrin is a natural wound healing matrix
  • Gel structure can be controlled based on Ca2 and
    fibrinogen concentrations
  • Amenable to inclusion of neurotrophic factors via
    Fa XIIIa sites
  • Degraded by plasmin, which is released by
    extending neurites

58
Fibrin Gel NGF Delivery System
  • Fibrin-based hydrogel
  • Incorporates NGF
  • Human recombinant
  • Factor XIIIa cross-link site
  • Plasmin degradation site
  • Releases on-demand

59
Other Polymer Systems in Neural Tissue Engineering
  • Hyaluronic acid (HyA)
  • Ubiquitous native ECM component
  • Found at high levels in CNS
  • Neuronal pericellular matrices
  • Myelin-rich fiber tracts
  • Cell surface receptors are expressed by many
    neuronal cell types
  • Thiolation permits addition of other polymers or
    factors
  • PEG modification of other systems
  • Fibrin
  • HyA


60
Hyaluronic Acid
  • Found in many Tissue Types
  • Prominent during development

Shu, et al, Biomacromolecules, 2002, 3(6)1304
61
Neural Cell Adhesion Peptides in Polymer Matrices
  • Peptide sequences from N-cadherin
  • Conjugated to functionalized PEG
  • Crosslinked into fibrin and HyA
  • Along with CRGDS
  • Chick DRGs cultured within for 48 hours
  • Will be compared to CRGDS alone and unmodified
    polymer

62
Cells and ECM Talk to One Another
  • Cells play a role in organizing the ECM while the
    ECM sends signals to the cells
  • deHart, et al studied the effect of a3b1 on the
    organization of laminin-5
  • Keratinocytes reorganized extracellular laminin-5
    into structures near the cell surface
  • Similar reorganization is seen with other ECM
    molecules and integrins.

G. W. deHart, et al. Exp. Cell Res, 283 (2003)
67-79
63
In Conclusion
  • Multiple parameters play a role in material -
    tissue interactions
  • Material design needs to take into account
    initial contact with the biological system
  • Complement
  • Coagulation
  • Foreign body response
  • Immunology
  • Biology holds secrets for specific relevant
    interactions between materials and cells
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