Journal of Nanobiotechnology (Nov 2024)
Microenvironment-optimized gastrodin-functionalized scaffolds orchestrate asymmetric division of recruited stem cells in endogenous bone regeneration
Abstract
Abstract The regeneration of osteoporotic bone defects remains challenging as the critical stem cell function is impaired by inflammatory microenvironment. Synthetic materials that intrinsically direct osteo-differentiation versus self-renewal of recruited stem cell represent a promising alternative strategy for endogenous bone formation. Therefore, a microenvironmentally optimized polyurethane (PU) /n-HA scaffold to enable sustained delivery of gastrodin is engineered to study its effect on the osteogenic fate of stem cells. It exhibited interconnected porous networks and an elevated sequential gastrodin release pattern to match immune-osteo cascade concurrent with progressive degradation of materials. In a critical-sized femur defect model of osteoporotic rat, 5% gastrodin-PU/n-HA potently promoted neo-bone regeneration by facilitating M2 macrophage polarization and CD146+ host stem cell recruitment to defective site. The implantation time-dependently increased the bone marrow mesenchymal stem cell (BMSC) population, and further culture of BMSCs showed a robust ability of proliferation, migration, and mitochondrial resurgence. Of note, some of cell pairs produced one stemness daughter cell while the other committed to osteogenic lineage in an asymmetric cell division (ACD) manner, and a much more compelling ACD response was triggered when 5% gastrodin-PU/n-HA implanted. Further investigation revealed that one-sided concentrated presentation of aPKC and β-catenin in dividing cells effectively induced asymmetric distribution, which polarized aPKC biased the response of the daughter cells to Wnt signal. The asymmetric cell division in skeletal stem cells (SSCs) was mechanically comparable to BMSCs and also governed by distinct aPKC and β-catenin biases. Concomitantly, delayed bone loss adjacent to the implant partly alleviated development of osteoporosis. In conclusion, our findings provide insight into the regulation of macrophage polarization combined with osteogenic commitment of recruited stem cells in an ACD manner, advancing scaffold design strategy for endogenous bone regeneration. Graphical abstract
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