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Poly(l-lysine)-g-Poly(ethylene glycol) Layers on Metal Oxide Surfaces:  Attachment Mechanism and Effects of Polymer Architecture on Resistance to Protein Adsorption

Kenausis, Gregory L.; Vörös, Janos; Elbert, Donald L.; Huang, Ningping; Hofer, Rolf; Ruiz-Taylor, Laurence; Textor, Marcus; Hubbell, Jeffrey A.; Spencer, Nicholas D.
ORIGINAL:0017595
ISSN: 1520-6106
CID: 5798502

Enzymatic incorporation of bioactive peptides into fibrin matrices enhances neurite extension

Schense, J C; Bloch, J; Aebischer, P; Hubbell, J A
Fibrin plays an important role in wound healing and regeneration, and enjoys widespread use in surgery and tissue engineering. The enzymatic activity of Factor XIIIa was employed to covalently incorporate exogenous bioactive peptides within fibrin during coagulation. Fibrin gels were formed with incorporated peptides from laminin and N-cadherin alone and in combination at concentrations up to 8.2 mol peptide per mole of fibrinogen. Neurite extension in vitro was enhanced when gels were augmented with exogenous peptide, with the maximal improvement reaching 75%. When this particular fibrin derivative was evaluated in rats in the repair of the severed dorsal root within polymeric tubes, the number of regenerated axons was enhanced by 85% relative to animals treated with tubes filled with unmodified fibrin. These results demonstrate that it is possible to enhance the biological activity of fibrin by enzymatically incorporating exogenous oligopeptide domains of morphoregulatory proteins.
PMID: 10748522
ISSN: 1087-0156
CID: 5798452

Three-dimensional migration of neurites is mediated by adhesion site density and affinity

Schense, J C; Hubbell, J A
Three-dimensional neurite outgrowth rates within fibrin matrices that contained variable amounts of RGD peptides were shown to depend on adhesion site density and affinity. Bi-domain peptides with a factor XIIIa substrate in one domain and a RGD sequence in the other domain were covalently incorporated into fibrin gels during coagulation through the action of the transglutaminase factor XIIIa, and the RGD-dependent effect on neurite outgrowth was quantified, employing chick dorsal root ganglia cultured two- and three-dimensionally within the modified fibrin. Two separate bi-domain peptides were synthesized, one with a lower binding affinity linear RGD domain and another with a higher binding affinity cyclic RGD domain. Both peptides were cross-linked into fibrin gels at concentrations up to 8.2 mol of peptide/mol of fibrinogen, and their effect on neurite outgrowth was measured. Both two- and three-dimensional neurite outgrowth demonstrated a bi-phasic dependence on RGD concentration for both the linear and cyclic peptide, with intermediate adhesion site densities yielding maximal neurite extension and higher densities inhibiting outgrowth. The adhesion site density that yielded maximal outgrowth depended strongly on adhesion site affinity in both two and three dimensions, with lower densities of the higher affinity ligand being required (0.8-1.7 mol/mol for the linear peptide versus 0.2 mol/mol for the cyclic peptide yielding maximum neurite outgrowth rates in three-dimensional cultures).
PMID: 10702239
ISSN: 0021-9258
CID: 5798442

Intraarterial protein delivery via intimally-adherent bilayer hydrogels

An, Y; Hubbell, J A
Arterial structure plays an important role in drug delivery from intraarterial depots. The internal elastic lamina forms a major diffusive resistance to the transport of macromolecular drugs from intimally-adherent hydrogel depots to the arterial media. The objectives of this study were to develop an approach by which to form a bilayer hydrogel depot with a higher permeability intimally-adherent layer, containing the drug, and a lower permeability luminal layer, and to evaluate ex vivo whether this luminal layer could enhance the delivery of a protein to the arterial media. Sequential interfacial photopolymerization of polyethyleneglycol diacrylate precursors (molecular weight 4000 for the luminal layer, 10,000 for the intimal layer) with eosin Y and triethanolamine as an initiation system was employed to form these bilayer hydrogels. Horseradish peroxidase was used as a model protein, and delivery to the arterial media was measured in rat carotid arteries ex vivo. The lower permeability luminal layer served to enhance delivery of the model protein into the arterial media for delivery periods at least up to 72 h. Thus, it was possible to compensate for the diffusional resistance of the internal elastic lamina on the one side of the hydrogel depot with a second diffusional resistance on the other side of the hydrogel.
PMID: 10640658
ISSN: 0168-3659
CID: 5798512

Blocking adhesion to cell and tissue surfaces by the chemisorption of a poly-L-lysine-graft-(poly(ethylene glycol); phenylboronic acid) copolymer

Winblade, N D; Nikolic, I D; Hoffman, A S; Hubbell, J A
A family of graft copolymers that can sterically inhibit interactions between biological surfaces was developed. These copolymers contained phenylboronic acid (PBA) groups as saccharide-binding moieties on a poly-(L-lysine) backbone and poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) grafted as adhesion-resisting side chains. These copolymers spontaneously chemisorbed to a saccharide-containing resin, and this binding was sterically controlled by the PEG grafting ratio. Copolymers with optimal grafting ratios spontaneously assembled on red blood cell surfaces and sterically prevented their agglutination by lectins and by antibodies to blood groups. The simple conjugation scheme created a PBA moiety with a pKa ca. 6, which can bind cis-diols much more strongly at physiological pH than typical PBA moieties, whose pKas are typically greater than 8. These surfactant copolymers can be employed to PEGylate cell or tissue surfaces by simply incubating the surfaces with an aqueous polymer solution, and have many potential applications such as preventing antibody binding to transplanted cells.
PMID: 11710177
ISSN: 1525-7797
CID: 5798422

Special issue: Cardiovascular biomaterials - Preface [Editorial]

West, JL; Hubbell, JA
ISI:000089541800001
ISSN: 0142-9612
CID: 5798432

Force measurements between bacteria and poly(ethylene glycol)-coated surfaces

Razatos, A; Ong, YL; Boulay, F; Elbert, DL; Hubbell, JA; Sharma, MM; Georgiou, G
ISI:000165477900013
ISSN: 0743-7463
CID: 5798482

Incorporation of heparin-binding peptides into fibrin gels enhances neurite extension: an example of designer matrices in tissue engineering

Sakiyama, S E; Schense, J C; Hubbell, J A
The goal of this work was to improve the potential of fibrin to promote nerve regeneration by enzymatically incorporating exogenous neurite-promoting heparin-binding peptides. The effects on neurite extension of four different heparin-binding peptides, derived from the heparin-binding domains of antithrombin III, neural cell adhesion molecule and platelet factor 4, were determined. These exogenous peptides were synthesized as bi-domain peptide chimeras, with the second domain being a substrate for factor XIIIa. This coagulation transglutaminase covalently bound the peptides within the fibrin gel during coagulation. The heparin-binding peptides enhanced the degree of neurite extension from embryonic chick dorsal root ganglia through 3-dimensional fibrin gels, and the extent of enhancement was found to correlate positively with the heparin-binding affinity of the individual domains. The enhancement could be inhibited by competition with soluble heparin, by degradation of cell-surface proteoglycans, and by inhibition of the covalent immobilization of the peptide. These results demonstrate an important potential role for proteoglycan-binding components of the extracellular matrix in neurite extension and suggest that fibrin gels modified with covalently bound heparin-binding peptides could serve as a therapeutic agent to enhance peripheral nerve regeneration through nerve guide tubes. More generally, the results demonstrate that the biological responses to fibrin, the body's natural wound healing matrix, can be dramatically improved by the addition of exogenous bioactive peptides in a manner such that they become immobilized during coagulation.-Sakiyama, S. E., Schense, J. C., Hubbell, J. A. Incorporation of heparin-binding peptides into fibrin gels enhances neurite extension: an example of designer matrices in tissue engineering.
PMID: 10593869
ISSN: 0892-6638
CID: 5798542

Rapid induction of functional and morphological continuity between severed ends of mammalian or earthworm myelinated axons

Lore, A B; Hubbell, J A; Bobb, D S; Ballinger, M L; Loftin, K L; Smith, J W; Smyers, M E; Garcia, H D; Bittner, G D
The inability to rapidly restore the loss of function that results from severance (cutting or crushing) of PNS and CNS axons is a severe clinical problem. As a novel strategy to help alleviate this problem, we have developed in vitro procedures using Ca2+-free solutions of polyethylene glycol (PEG solutions), which within minutes induce functional and morphological continuity (PEG-induced fusion) between the cut or crushed ends of myelinated sciatic or spinal axons in rats. Using a PEG-based hydrogel that binds to connective tissue to provide mechanical strength at the lesion site and is nontoxic to nerve tissues in earthworms and mammals, we have also developed in vivo procedures that permanently maintain earthworm myelinated medial giant axons whose functional and morphological integrity has been restored by PEG-induced fusion after axonal severance. In all these in vitro or in vivo procedures, the success of PEG-induced fusion of sciatic or spinal axons and myelinated medial giant axons is measured by the restored conduction of action potentials through the lesion site, the presence of intact axonal profiles in electron micrographs taken at the lesion site, and/or the intra-axonal diffusion of fluorescent dyes across the lesion site. These and other data suggest that the application of polymeric fusiogens (such as our PEG solutions), possibly combined with a tissue adherent (such as our PEG hydrogels), could lead to in vivo treatments that rapidly and permanently repair cut or crushed axons in the PNS and CNS of adult mammals, including humans.
PMCID:6786066
PMID: 10087059
ISSN: 0270-6474
CID: 5798552

Bioactive biomaterials

Hubbell, J A
The most important advances in the field of biomaterials over the past few years have been in bioactive biomaterials. Materials have been developed to incorporate bioactivity through biological recognition, including incorporation of adhesion factors, polyanionic sites that mimic the electrostatics of biological regulatory polysaccharides, and cleavage sites for enzymes involved in cell migration. Materials have also been developed to be active in biological environments by undergoing phase changes in situ, including transformations from liquid precursors to solids and from soluble materials to materials that are immobilised on tissue surfaces.
PMID: 10209141
ISSN: 0958-1669
CID: 5798572