Bioactive Materials (Aug 2024)

Exosomes loaded a smart bilayer-hydrogel scaffold with ROS-scavenging and macrophage-reprogramming properties for repairing cartilage defect

  • Xiaoqing Lu,
  • Shimin Dai,
  • Benzhao Huang,
  • Shishuo Li,
  • Peng Wang,
  • Zhibo Zhao,
  • Xiao Li,
  • Ningbo Li,
  • Jie Wen,
  • Yunhan Sun,
  • Zhentao Man,
  • Bing Liu,
  • Wei Li

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 38
pp. 137 – 153

Abstract

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Enhancing the regeneration of cartilage defects remains challenging owing to limited innate self-healing as well as acute inflammation arising from the overexpression of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in post-traumatic microenvironments. Recently, stem cell-derived exosomes (Exos) have been developed as potential cell-free therapy for cartilage regeneration. Although this approach promotes chondrogenesis, it neglects the emerging inflammatory microenvironment. In this study, a smart bilayer-hydrogel dual-loaded with sodium diclofenac (DC), an anti-inflammatory drug, and Exos from bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells was developed to mitigate initial-stage inflammation and promote late-stage stem-cell recruitment and chondrogenic differentiation. First, the upper-hydrogel composed of phenylboronic-acid-crosslinked polyvinyl alcohol degrades in response to elevated levels of ROS to release DC, which mitigates oxidative stress, thus reprogramming macrophages to the pro-healing state. Subsequently, Exos are slowly released from the lower-hydrogel composed of hyaluronic acid into an optimal microenvironment for the stimulation of chondrogenesis. Both in vitro and in vivo assays confirmed that the dual-loaded bilayer-hydrogel reduced post-traumatic inflammation and enhanced cartilage regeneration by effectively scavenging ROS and reprogramming macrophages. The proposed platform provides multi-staged therapy, which allows for the optimal harnessing of Exos as a therapeutic for cartilage regeneration.

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