1. Regenerative potential of silk conduits in repair of peripheral nerve injury in adult rats
- Author
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Mohammad Arastoo, S. Lesage, David Philip Knight, M. Hussain, Nicholas James Vavasour Skaer, Tom Gheysens, V. Ibba, Wenlong Huang, Thomas R Barber, N.C.H. Tee, Q. Yang, Lesley G. Robson, R. Begum, and John V. Priestley
- Subjects
Male ,Materials science ,Neurite ,Silk ,Biophysics ,Schwann cell ,Bioengineering ,Biomaterials ,03 medical and health sciences ,Gastrocnemius muscle ,0302 clinical medicine ,Peripheral Nerve Injuries ,Bombyx mori ,Ganglia, Spinal ,medicine ,Animals ,Spider silk ,Rats, Wistar ,Cells, Cultured ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,biology ,Guided Tissue Regeneration ,Regeneration (biology) ,Prostheses and Implants ,Anatomy ,biology.organism_classification ,Immunohistochemistry ,Nerve Regeneration ,Rats ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Mechanics of Materials ,Peripheral nerve injury ,cardiovascular system ,Ceramics and Composites ,Sciatic nerve ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Various attempts have been made to develop artificial conduits for nerve repair, but with limited success. We describe here conduits made from Bombyx mori regenerated silk protein, and containing luminal fibres of Spidrex(®), a silk-based biomaterial with properties similar to those of spider silk. Assessment in vitro demonstrated that Spidrex(®) fibres support neurite outgrowth. For evaluation in vivo, silk conduits 10 mm in length and containing 0, 100, 200 or 300 luminal Spidrex(®) fibres, were implanted to bridge an 8 mm gap in the rat sciatic nerve. At 4 weeks, conduits containing 200 luminal Spidrex(®) fibres (PN200) supported 62% and 59% as much axon growth as autologous nerve graft controls at mid-conduit and distal nerve respectively. Furthermore, Spidrex(®) conduits displayed similar Schwann cell support and macrophage response to controls. At 12 weeks, animals implanted with PN200 conduits showed similar numbers of myelinated axons (81%) to controls, similar gastrocnemius muscle innervation, and similar hindpaw stance assessed by Catwalk footprint analysis. Plantar skin innervation was 73% of that of controls. PN200 Spidrex(®) conduits were also effective at bridging longer (11 and 13 mm) gaps. Our results show that Spidrex(®) conduits promote excellent axonal regeneration and function recovery, and may have potential for clinical application.
- Published
- 2012
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