REDV-Functionalized Recombinant Spider Silk for Next-Generation Coronary Artery Stent Coatings: Hemocompatible, Drug-Eluting, and Endothelial Cell-Specific Materials.
Kai MayerAlexander RuhoffNicholas J ChanAnna WaterhouseAndrea J O'ConnorThomas ScheibelDaniel E HeathPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2024)
Coronary artery stents are life-saving devices, and millions of these devices are implanted annually to treat coronary heart disease. The current gold standard in treatment is drug-eluting stents, which are coated with a biodegradable polymer layer that elutes antiproliferative drugs to prevent restenosis due to neointimal hyperplasia. Stenting is commonly paired with systemic antiplatelet therapy to prevent stent thrombosis. Despite their clinical success, current stents have significant limitations including inducing local inflammation that drives hyperplasia; a lack of hemocompatibility that promotes thrombosis, increasing need for antiplatelet therapy; and limited endothelialization, which is a critical step in the healing process. In this research, we designed a novel material for use as a next-generation coating for drug-eluting stents that addresses the limitations described above. Specifically, we developed a recombinant spider silk material that is functionalized with an REDV cell-adhesive ligand, a peptide motif that promotes specific adhesion of endothelial cells in the cardiovascular environment. We illustrated that this REDV-modified spider silk variant [eADF4(C16)-REDV] is an endothelial-cell-specific material that can promote the formation of a near-confluent endothelium. We additionally performed hemocompatibility assays using human whole blood and demonstrated that spider silk materials exhibit excellent hemocompatibility under both static and flow conditions. Furthermore, we showed that the material displayed slow enzyme-mediated degradation. Finally, we illustrated the ability to load and release the clinically relevant drug everolimus from recombinant spider silk coatings in a quantity and at a rate similar to that of commercial devices. These results support the use of REDV-functionalized recombinant spider silk as a coating for drug-eluting stents.
Keyphrases
- antiplatelet therapy
- endothelial cells
- coronary artery
- acute coronary syndrome
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- tissue engineering
- wound healing
- high glucose
- pulmonary artery
- drug induced
- pulmonary embolism
- quantum dots
- single cell
- vascular endothelial growth factor
- molecularly imprinted
- drug delivery
- adverse drug
- high throughput
- coronary artery disease
- staphylococcus aureus
- vascular smooth muscle cells
- high resolution
- cystic fibrosis
- atrial fibrillation
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- biofilm formation