Optimizing fibrin hydrogel toward effective neural progenitor cell delivery in spinal cord injury.
Tara SudhadeviHarikrishnan S VijayakumarEaswer V HariharanSamavedam SandhyamaniLissy Kalliyana KrishnanPublished in: Biomedical materials (Bristol, England) (2021)
Transplantation of neural progenitor cell (NPC) possessing the potential to differentiate into neurons may guard against spinal cord injury (SCI)- associated neuronal trauma. We propose that autologous-like NPC may reduce post-transplant immune response. The study used the rat SCI model to prove this concept. For isolation and expansion of rat NPC for cell-based SCI therapy, thein vitroprotocol standardized with human NPC seemed suitable. The primary aim of this study is to select a cell/neural tissue-compatible biomaterial for improving NPC survivalin vivo. The composition of the fibrin hydrogel is adjusted to obtain degradable, porous, and robust fibrin strands for supporting neural cell attachment, migration, and tissue regeneration. This study employed NPC culture to evaluate the cytocompatibility and suitability of the hydrogel, composed by adding graded concentrations of thrombin to a fixed fibrinogen concentration. The microstructure evaluation by scanning electron microscope guided the selection of a suitable composition for delivering the embedded cells. On adding more thrombin, fibrinogen clotted quickly but reduced porosity, pore size, and fiber strand thickness. The high activity of thrombin also affected NPC morphology and thein vitrocell survival. The selected hydrogel carried viable NPC and retained them at the injury site post-transplantation. The fibrin hydrogel played a protective role throughout the transfer process by providing cell attachment sites and survival signals. The fibrin and NPC together regulated the immune response at the SCI site reducing ED1+ve/ED2+vemacrophages in the early period of 8-16 d after injury. Migration ofβ-III tubulin+veneural-like cells into the fibrin-injected control SCI is evident. The continuous use of a non-neurotoxic fibrin matrix could be a convenient strategy forin vitroNPC preparation, minimally invasive cell delivery, and better transplantation outcome.
Keyphrases
- spinal cord injury
- cell therapy
- immune response
- single cell
- drug delivery
- spinal cord
- platelet rich plasma
- minimally invasive
- stem cells
- tissue engineering
- emergency department
- neuropathic pain
- bone marrow
- oxidative stress
- dendritic cells
- blood brain barrier
- cell death
- multiple sclerosis
- optical coherence tomography
- induced apoptosis
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- robot assisted
- simultaneous determination
- mesenchymal stem cells