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Development of Tissue-Engineered Model of Fibrotic Scarring after Spinal Cord Injury to Study Astrocyte Activation and Neurite Outgrowth In Vitro.

Nikolas Ala-KokkoInha BaekYoung Hye Song
Published in: ACS biomaterials science & engineering (2024)
Traumatic spinal cord injuries (SCI) are debilitating injuries affecting twenty-seven million people worldwide and cause functional impairments. Despite decades of research and medical advancements, current treatment options for SCI remain limited, in part due to the complex pathophysiology of spinal cord lesions including cellular transformation and extracellular matrix (ECM) remodeling. Recent studies have increased focus on fibrotic scarring after SCI, and yet much remains unclear about the impact of fibrotic scarring on SCI lesion progression. Here, using collagen and decellularized spinal cord-based composite hydrogels, a three-dimensional (3D) cell culture model mimicking the fibrous core of spinal cord lesions was implemented to investigate its influence on the surrounding astrocytes. To mimic the fibrotic milieu, collagen fibril thickness was tuned using previously established temperature-controlled casting methods. In our platforms, astrocytes in fibro-mimetic hydrogels exhibited increased levels of activation markers such as glial fibrillary acidic protein and N-cadherin. Furthermore, astrocytes in fibro-mimetic hydrogels deposited more fibronectin and laminin, further hinting that astrocytes may also contribute to fibrotic scarring. These markers were decreased when Rho-ROCK and integrin β1 were inhibited via pharmacological inhibitors. Mechanistic analysis of Yes-associated protein reveals that blocking integrin β1 prevents mechanosensing of astrocytes, contributing to altered phenotypes in variable culture conditions. In the presence of these inhibitors, astrocytes increased the secretion of brain-derived neurotrophic factor, and a greater degree of dorsal root ganglia neurite infiltration into the underlying hydrogels was observed. Altogether, this study presents a novel tissue-engineered platform to study fibrotic scarring after SCI and may be a useful platform to advance our understanding of SCI lesion aggravation.
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