Coronary heart disease is a leading cause of death. Tissue remodeling and fibrosis results in cardiac pump dysfunction and ischemic heart failure. Cardiac fibroblasts may rebuild damaged tissues when prompted by suitable environmental cues. Here, we use acellular biologic extracellular matrix scaffolds (bioscaffolds) to stimulate pathways of muscle repair and restore tissue function. We show that acellular bioscaffolds with bioinductive properties can redirect cardiac fibroblasts to rebuild microvascular networks and avoid tissue fibrosis. Specifically, when human cardiac fibroblasts are combined with bioactive scaffolds, gene expression is upregulated and paracrine mediators are released that promote vasculogenesis and prevent scarring. We assess these properties in rodents with myocardial infarction and observe bioscaffolds to redirect fibroblasts, reduce tissue fibrosis and prevent maladaptive structural remodeling. Our preclinical data confirms that acellular bioscaffold therapy provides an appropriate microenvironment to stimulate pathways of functional repair. We translate our observations to patients with coronary heart disease by conducting a first-in-human observational cohort study. We show that bioscaffold therapy is associated with improved perfusion of infarcted myocardium, reduced myocardial scar burden, and reverse structural remodeling. We establish that clinical use of acellular bioscaffolds is feasible and offers a new frontier to enhance surgical revascularization of ischemic heart muscle.
The equine distal limb wound healing
model, characterized by delayed
re-epithelialization and a fibroproliferative response to wounding
similar to that observed in humans, is a valuable tool for the study
of biomaterials poised for translation into both the veterinary and
human medical markets. In the current study, we developed a novel
method of biaxial biomechanical testing to assess the functional outcomes
of healed wounds in a modified equine model and discovered significant
functional and structural differences in both unwounded and injured
skin at different locations on the distal limb that must be considered
when using this model in future work. Namely, the medial skin was
thicker and displayed earlier collagen engagement, medial wounds experienced
a greater proportion of wound contraction during closure, and proximal
wounds produced significantly more exuberant granulation tissue. Using
this new knowledge of the equine model of aberrant wound healing,
we then investigated the effect of a peptide-modified collagen–chitosan
hydrogel on wound healing. Here, we found that a single treatment
with the QHREDGS (glutamine–histidine–arginine–glutamic
acid–aspartic acid–glycine–serine) peptide-modified
hydrogel (Q-peptide hydrogel) resulted in a higher rate of wound closure
and was able to modulate the biomechanical function toward a more
compliant healed tissue without observable negative effects. Thus,
we conclude that the use of a Q-peptide hydrogel provides a safe and
effective means of improving the rate and quality of wound healing
in a large animal model.
SummaryFollowing full-thickness skin injuries, epithelialization of the wound is essential. The standard of care to achieve this wound “closure” in patients is autologous split-thickness skin grafting (STSG). However, patients living with STSGs report significant chronic impairments leading to functional deficiencies such as itch, altered sensation, fragility, hypertrophic scarring, and contractures. These features are attributable to the absence of functional dermis combined with the formation of disorganized fibrotic extracellular matrix. Recent work has demonstrated the existence of dermal progenitor cells (DPCs) residing within hair follicles that function to continuously regenerate mesenchymal tissue. The present work examines whether cultured DPCs could regenerate dermis within an STSG and improve overall graft function. Adult human DPCs were transplanted into a full-thickness skin wound in immune-compromised mice and closed with a human STSG. At 3 months, human DPCs (hDPCs) had successfully integrated into the xenograft and differentiated into various regionally specified phenotypes, improving both viscoelastic properties of the graft and mitigating pruritus.
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