Continuous Delivery of Stromal Cell-Derived Factor-1 from Alginate Scaffolds Accelerates Wound Healing

Author:

Rabbany Sina Y.12,Pastore Joseph3,Yamamoto Masaya24,Miller Tim3,Rafii Shahin25,Aras Rahul3,Penn Marc36

Affiliation:

1. Bioengineering Program, Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY, USA

2. Department of Genetic Medicine, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY, USA

3. Juventas Therapeutics, Inc., Cleveland, OH, USA

4. Department of Biomaterials, Institute for Frontier Medical Sciences, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan

5. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY, USA

6. Department of Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH, USA

Abstract

Proper wound diagnosis and management is an increasingly important clinical challenge and is a large and growing unmet need. Pressure ulcers, hard-to-heal wounds, and problematic surgical incisions are emerging at increasing frequencies. At present, the wound-healing industry is experiencing a paradigm shift towards innovative treatments that exploit nanotechnology, biomaterials, and biologics. Our study utilized an alginate hydrogel patch to deliver stromal cell-derived factor-1 (SDF-1), a naturally occurring chemokine that is rapidly overexpressed in response to tissue injury, to assess the potential effects SDF-1 therapy on wound closure rates and scar formation. Alginate patches were loaded with either purified recombinant human SDF-1 protein or plasmid expressing SDF-1 and the kinetics of SDF-1 release were measured both in vitro and in vivo in mice. Our studies demonstrate that although SDF-1 plasmid- and protein-loaded patches were able to release therapeutic product over hours to days, SDF-1 protein was released faster (in vivo Kd0.55 days) than SDF-1 plasmid (in vivo Kd3.67 days). We hypothesized that chronic SDF-1 delivery would be more effective in accelerating the rate of dermal wound closure in Yorkshire pigs with acute surgical wounds, a model that closely mimics human wound healing. Wounds treated with SDF-1 protein ( n = 10) and plasmid ( n = 6) loaded patches healed faster than sham ( n = 4) or control ( n = 4). At day 9, SDF-1-treated wounds significantly accelerated wound closure (55.0 ± 14.3% healed) compared to nontreated controls (8.2 ± 6.0%, p < 0.05). Furthermore, 38% of SDF-1-treated wounds were fully healed at day 9 (vs. none in controls) with very little evidence of scarring. These data suggest that patch-mediated SDF-1 delivery may ultimately provide a novel therapy for accelerating healing and reducing scarring in clinical wounds.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Transplantation,Cell Biology,Biomedical Engineering

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