Implant design has evolved from biochemically inert substrates, minimizing cell and protein interaction, towards sophisticated bioactive substrates, modulating the host response and supporting the regeneration of the injured tissue. Important aspects to consider are the control of cell adhesion, the discrimination of bacteria and non-local cells from the desired tissue cell type, and the stimulation of implant integration and wound healing. Here, the extracellular matrix acts as a role model providing us with inspiration for sophisticated designs. Within this scope, small bioactive peptides have proven to be miscellaneously deployable for the mediation of surface, cell and matrix interactions. Combinations of adhesion ligands, proteoglycans, and modulatory proteins should guide multiple aspects of the regeneration process and cooperativity between the different extracellular matrix components, which bears the chance to maximize the therapeutic efficiency and simultaneously lower the doses. Hence, efforts to include multiple of these factors in biomaterial design are well worth. In the following, multifunctional implant coatings based on bioactive peptides are reviewed and concepts to implement strong surface anchoring for stable cell adhesion and a dynamic delivery of modulator proteins are discussed.
TFF3 regulates essential gastro- and neuroprotective functions, but its molecular mode of action remains poorly understood. Synthetic intractability and lack of reliable bioassays and validated receptors are bottlenecks for mechanistic and structure–activity relationship studies. Here, we report the chemical synthesis of TFF3 and its homodimer via native chemical ligation followed by oxidative folding. Correct folding was confirmed by NMR and circular dichroism, and TFF3 and its homodimer were not cytotoxic or hemolytic. TFF3, its homodimer, and the trefoil domain (TFF3 10-50 ) were susceptible to gastrointestinal degradation, revealing a gut-stable metabolite (TFF3 7-54 ; t 1/2 > 24 h) that retained its trefoil structure and antiapoptotic bioactivity. We tried to validate the putative TFF3 receptors CXCR4 and LINGO2, but neither TFF3 nor its homodimer displayed any activity up to 10 μM. The discovery of a gut-stable bioactive metabolite and reliable synthetic accessibility to TFF3 and its analogues are cornerstones for future molecular probe development and structure–activity relationship studies.
Controlled release of active biomolecules is an attractive approach to modulate chemotactic gradients and accordingly the recruitment of cells, e.g. endothelial progenitor cells to improve wound healing or stimulate angiogenesis after myocardial infarction. Here, we developed variants of hCXCL12, also named stromal cell-derived factor 1α, a chemokine that activates the CXCR4 and consequently recruits tissue specific stem and progenitor cells. hCXCL12 variants were designed to bind to glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) with different affinities in order to modulate its release. Sixteen analogs were recombinantly produced, characterized, and tested for their GAG-binding property. The most promising variants hCXCL12 K24/K27/R41/R47A and hCXCL12 Q48K were used for release studies from starPEG-heparin-hydrogels. The reduced GAG affinity led to a fast release of hCXCL12 K24/K27/R41/R47A, whereas hCXCL12 Q48K was slowly released over 2 weeks due to its increased binding strength compared to wild type hCXCL12. Migration of Jurkat cells and early endothelial progenitor cells was proven to demonstrate the applicability of the approach to endogenously CXCR4 expressing cell types. Thus, this work offers new options for enhancing chemotactic hCXCL12 gradients by a combination of native and modified hCXCL12 variants to improve and prolong the recruitment of CXCR4-positive stem and progenitor cells to injured sites.
The inorganic arsenic species arsenate and arsenite are common environmental toxins which contaminate the drinking water in many countries. Chronic intoxication with arsenicals has been connected with various diseases, but causes also neurological complications and impairs cognitive development, learning and memory. In brain, astrocytes have a pivotal role as partners of neurons in homeostatic and metabolic processes. In addition, astrocytes are the first parenchymal brain cell type which encounters substances which cross the blood-brain barrier and are considered as first line of defence against the toxic potential of xenobiotics. Therefore, astrocytes are likely to play a prominent role in the metabolism and potential detoxification of arsenicals in brain. This article summarizes the current knowledge on the uptake and toxicity of arsenate and arsenite in astrocytes and discusses the modulation of the astrocytic glucose and glutathione metabolism by arsenicals.
Biomaterials are designed to improve impaired healing of injured tissue. To accomplish better cell integration, we suggest to coat biomaterial surfaces with bio-functional proteins. Here, a mussel-derived surface-binding peptide is used and coupled to CXCL12 (stromal cell-derived factor 1α), a chemokine that activates CXCR4 and consequently recruits tissue-specific stem and progenitor cells. CXCL12 variants with either non-releasable or protease-mediated-release properties were designed and compared. Whereas CXCL12 was stabilized at the N-terminus for protease resistance, a C-terminal linker was designed that allowed for specific cleavage-mediated release by matrix metalloproteinase 9 and 2, since both enzymes are frequently found in wound fluid. These surface adhesive CXCL12 derivatives were produced by expressed protein ligation. Functionality of the modified chemokines was assessed by inositol phosphate accumulation and cell migration assays. Increased migration of keratinocytes and primary mesenchymal stem cells was demonstrated. Immobilization and release were studied for bioresorbable PCL-co-LC scaffolds, and accelerated wound closure was demonstrated in an ex vivo wound healing assay on porcine skin grafts. After 24 h, a significantly improved CXCL12-specific growth stimulation of the epithelial tips was already observed. The presented data display a successful application of protein-coated biomaterials for skin regeneration.
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