1. Enhanced dermal wound neovascularization by targeted delivery of endothelial progenitor cells using an RGD-g-PLLA scaffold
- Author
-
Se Won Yie, Jeong-Min Kim, Wonhee Suh, Cheong-Rae Roh, Eun-Seok Jeon, Kwideok Park, Sun-Hwa Song, Dong Keun Han, Koung Li Kim, Ho Yun Ki, Ji Yeon Kim, and Duk-Kyung Kim
- Subjects
Male ,Polymers ,Angiogenesis ,Polyesters ,Biophysics ,Mice, Nude ,Neovascularization, Physiologic ,Biocompatible Materials ,Bioengineering ,Biology ,Biomaterials ,Neovascularization ,Mice ,Materials Testing ,Cell Adhesion ,medicine ,Animals ,Regeneration ,Lactic Acid ,Progenitor cell ,Nitrites ,Wound Healing ,Tissue Scaffolds ,Endothelial Cells ,Dermis ,Transplantation ,Endothelial stem cell ,Mechanics of Materials ,embryonic structures ,cardiovascular system ,Ceramics and Composites ,Cancer research ,Stem cell ,medicine.symptom ,Wound healing ,Oligopeptides ,Stem Cell Transplantation ,circulatory and respiratory physiology ,Homing (hematopoietic) ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
Endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs), endothelial precursors that promote neovascularization in ischemic tissues, have shown the limited vascular regeneration efficacy due to their poor homing into injured sites and low survival, so that a variety of biosynthetic scaffolds have been employed as cell delivery vehicles to overcome the current cell transplantation methods. However, few paralleled studies that directly compare the efficacy of EPCs seeded within synthetic scaffolds to that of EPCs delivered by the conventional transplantation techniques used for EPC therapies have been performed. To address these issues, RGD-g-PLLA biosynthetic scaffold was developed for the targeted EPC delivery and was found to successfully support the in vitro growth and endothelial functions of EPCs. This scaffold also appeared to be good as in vivo targeted delivery carriers of EPCs as it promoted vascular regeneration in a murine dermal wound models. Furthermore, direct comparison with the intradermal EPC injection revealed that the targeted delivery of EPCs by using the RGD-g-PLLA scaffold was superior to their conventional local injection method in terms of the localization and survival/retention of the transplanted EPCs, and their vascular repairing potential. These results suggest that the development of an effective stem cell delivery system may help to maximize the tissue-repairing efficacy with a limited number of stem cells, thereby resolving the limited clinical success of current stem cell therapies that have utilized simple cell injections or infusions.
- Published
- 2009