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Mitochondrial-Oriented Injectable Hydrogel Microspheres Maintain Homeostasis of Chondrocyte Metabolism to Promote Subcellular Therapy in Osteoarthritis

Authors :
Li Chen
Jianye Yang
Zhengwei Cai
Yanran Huang
Pengcheng Xiao
Hong Chen
Xiaoji Luo
Wei Huang
Wenguo Cui
Ning Hu
Source :
Research, Vol 7 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2024.

Abstract

Subcellular mitochondria serve as sensors for energy metabolism and redox balance, and the dynamic regulation of functional and dysfunctional mitochondria plays a crucial role in determining cells' fate. Selective removal of dysfunctional mitochondria at the subcellular level can provide chondrocytes with energy to prevent degeneration, thereby treating osteoarthritis. Herein, to achieve an ideal subcellular therapy, cartilage affinity peptide (WYRGRL)-decorated liposomes loaded with mitophagy activator (urolithin A) were integrated into hyaluronic acid methacrylate hydrogel microspheres through microfluidic technology, named HM@WY-Lip/UA, that could efficiently target chondrocytes and selectively remove subcellular dysfunctional mitochondria. As a result, this system demonstrated an advantage in mitochondria function restoration, reactive oxygen species scavenging, cell survival rescue, and chondrocyte homeostasis maintenance through increasing mitophagy. In a rat post-traumatic osteoarthritis model, the intra-articular injection of HM@WY-Lip/UA ameliorated cartilage matrix degradation, osteophyte formation, and subchondral bone sclerosis at 8 weeks. Overall, this study indicated that HM@WY-Lip/UA provided a protective effect on cartilage degeneration in an efficacious and clinically relevant manner, and a mitochondrial-oriented strategy has great potential in the subcellular therapy of osteoarthritis.

Subjects

Subjects :
Science

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26395274
Volume :
7
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.36da9fd5d11417287c6faa8c51ec9c8
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.34133/research.0306