Materials & Design (Dec 2022)

Curcumin loaded polycaprolactone scaffold capable of anti-inflammation to enhance tracheal cartilage regeneration

  • Minglei Yang,
  • Weiyan Sun,
  • Long Wang,
  • Hai Tang,
  • Xiang Xu,
  • Liangwei Yang,
  • Junjun Ni,
  • Kuoen Zheng,
  • Xu Jiang,
  • Weiwen Xu,
  • Guofang Zhao,
  • Yunlang She,
  • Lei Zhang,
  • Dong Xie,
  • Chang Chen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 224
p. 111299

Abstract

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An inflammatory reaction is one of the primary reasons for deteriorating tracheal cartilage regeneration in vivo, hindering tracheal defect restoration with prominent fibrosis and granulation hyperplasia. Therefore, effective anti-inflammatory therapeutic strategies may considerably promote tracheal cartilage regeneration and tracheal defect restoration. We prepared a porous ring-shaped Cur/PCL scaffold by loading curcumin (Cur), an anti-inflammatory compound, into polycaprolactone (PCL) using the supercritical CO2 foaming method. Our results confirmed that the Cur/PCL possessed similar porosity with the PCL alone scaffold. The Cur loaded within the Cur/PCL scaffold exhibited sustained release kinetics, stability and a favorable anti-inflammation property in vitro. Moreover, The Cur/PCL scaffold displayed gratifying biocompatibility and supported ring-shaped tracheal cartilage regeneration. In addition, the engineered ring-shaped tracheal cartilage in the Cur/PCL group showed a potent anti-inflammatory effect on maintaining the cartilaginous phenotype and enhanced tracheal cartilage regeneration when subcutaneously implanted into an autologous rabbit. Furthermore, the engineered cartilage in the Cur/PCL group exerted a favorable anti-inflammatory capacity to significantly suppress fibrogenesis and granulation hyperplasia, enhancing tracheal cartilage regeneration and elevating survival rate of experimental rabbits after orthotopic transplantation. This study provides an effective strategy to prepare an anti-inflammatory scaffold for enhancing cartilage regeneration in vivo and repairing tracheal cartilage defects.

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