Development of miR-26a-activated scaffold to promote healing of critical-sized bone defects through angiogenic and osteogenic mechanisms
- PMID: 37979514
- DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2023.122398
Development of miR-26a-activated scaffold to promote healing of critical-sized bone defects through angiogenic and osteogenic mechanisms
Abstract
Very large bone defects significantly diminish the vascular, blood, and nutrient supply to the injured site, reducing the bone's ability to self-regenerate and complicating treatment. Delivering nanomedicines from biomaterial scaffolds that induce host cells to produce bone-healing proteins is emerging as an appealing solution for treating these challenging defects. In this context, microRNA-26a mimics (miR-26a) are particularly interesting as they target the two most relevant processes in bone regeneration-angiogenesis and osteogenesis. However, the main limitation of microRNAs is their poor stability and issues with cytosolic delivery. Thus, utilising a collagen-nanohydroxyapatite (coll-nHA) scaffold in combination with cell-penetrating peptide (RALA) nanoparticles, we aimed to develop an effective system to deliver miR-26a nanoparticles to regenerate bone defects in vivo. The microRNA-26a complexed RALA nanoparticles, which showed the highest transfection efficiency, were incorporated into collagen-nanohydroxyapatite scaffolds and in vitro assessment demonstrated the miR-26a-activated scaffolds effectively transfected human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) resulting in enhanced production of vascular endothelial growth factor, increased alkaline phosphatase activity, and greater mineralisation. After implantation in critical-sized rat calvarial defects, micro CT and histomorphological analysis revealed that the miR-26a-activated scaffolds improved bone repair in vivo, producing new bone of superior quality, which was highly mineralised and vascularised compared to a miR-free scaffold. This innovative combination of osteogenic collagen-nanohydroxyapatite scaffolds with multifunctional microRNA-26a complexed nanoparticles provides an effective carrier delivering nanoparticles locally with high efficacy and minimal off-target effects and demonstrates the potential of targeting osteogenic-angiogenic coupling using scaffold-based nanomedicine delivery as a new "off-the-shelf" product capable of healing complex bone injuries.
Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of competing interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests:Fergal O'Brien reports financial support was provided by Science Foundation Ireland. Fergal O'Brien reports financial support was provided by European Research Council. Joanna Sadowska reports financial support was provided by European Commission. Joanna Sadowska reports financial support was provided by ON Foundation. Seth Donahue reports financial support was provided by National Science Foundation. Helen O. McCarthy reports financial support was provided by Science Foundation Ireland. Helen O. McCarthy has patent #WO2014087023 issued to Helen O. McCarthy.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources