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The Kinetics of Small Extracellular Vesicle Delivery Impacts Skin Tissue Regeneration.

Helena Henriques-AntunesRenato M S CardosoAlessandra ZonariJoana CorreiaErmelindo C LealAdrián Jiménez-BalsaMiguel M LinoAna BarradasIvana KosticCélia GomesJeffrey M KarpEugénia CarvalhoLino S Ferreira
Published in: ACS nano (2019)
Small extracellular vesicles (SEVs) offer a promising strategy for tissue regeneration, yet their short lifetime at the injured tissue limits their efficacy. Here, we show that kinetics of SEV delivery impacts tissue regeneration at tissue, cellular, and molecular levels. We show that multiple carefully timed applications of SEVs had superior regeneration than a single dose of the same total concentration of SEVs. Importantly, diabetic and non-diabetic wounds treated with a single time point dose of an injectable light-triggerable hydrogel containing SEVs demonstrated a robust increase in closure kinetics relative to wounds treated with a single or multiple doses of SEVs or platelet-derived growth factor BB, an FDA-approved wound regenerative therapy. The pro-healing activity of released SEVs was mediated at the tissue/cell level by an increase in skin neovascularization and re-epithelization and at the molecular level by an alteration in the expression of 7 miRNAs at different times during wound healing. This includes an alteration of has-miR-150-5p, identified here to be important for skin regeneration.
Keyphrases
  • wound healing
  • stem cells
  • growth factor
  • type diabetes
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • cell therapy
  • drug delivery
  • single cell
  • single molecule
  • bone marrow
  • diabetic retinopathy
  • endothelial cells
  • newly diagnosed
  • binding protein