Bioactive Materials (Oct 2022)

Engineering an enthesis-like graft for rotator cuff repair: An approach to fabricate highly biomimetic scaffold capable of zone-specifically releasing stem cell differentiation inducers

  • Can Chen,
  • Qiang Shi,
  • Muzhi Li,
  • Yang Chen,
  • Tao Zhang,
  • Yan Xu,
  • Yunjie Liao,
  • Shulin Ding,
  • Zhanwen Wang,
  • Xing Li,
  • Chunfeng Zhao,
  • Lunquan Sun,
  • Jianzhong Hu,
  • Hongbin Lu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16
pp. 451 – 471

Abstract

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Rotator cuff (RC) attaches to humerus across a triphasic yet continuous tissue zones (bone-fibrocartilage-tendon), termed “enthesis”. Regrettably, rapid and functional enthesis regeneration is challenging after RC tear. The existing grafts bioengineered for RC repair are insufficient, as they were engineered by a scaffold that did not mimic normal enthesis in morphology, composition, and tensile property, meanwhile cannot simultaneously stimulate the formation of bone-fibrocartilage-tendon tissues. Herein, an optimized decellularization approach based on a vacuum aspiration device (VAD) was developed to fabricate a book-shaped decellularized enthesis matrix (O-BDEM). Then, three recombinant growth factors (CBP-GFs) capable of binding collagen were synthesized by fusing a collagen-binding peptide (CBP) into the N-terminal of BMP-2, TGF-β3, or GDF-7, and zone-specifically tethered to the collagen of O-BDEM to fabricate a novel scaffold (CBP-GFs/O-BDEM) satisfying the above-mentioned requirements. After ensuring the low immunogenicity of CBP-GFs/O-BDEM by a novel single-cell mass cytometry in a mouse model, we interleaved urine-derived stem cell-sheets into this CBP-GFs/O-BDEM to bioengineer an enthesis-like graft. Its high-performance on regenerating enthesis was determined in a canine model. These findings indicate this CBP-GFs/O-BDEM may be an excellent scaffold for constructing enthesis-like graft to patch large/massive RC tears, and provide breakthroughs in fabricating graded interfacial tissue.

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