166 research outputs found
Neutrophils exhibit distinct phenotypes toward chitosans with different degrees of deacetylation: implications for cartilage repair
Introduction Osteoarthritis is characterized by the progressive destruction of cartilage in the articular joints. Novel therapies that promote resurfacing of exposed bone in focal areas are of interest in osteoarthritis because they may delay the progression of this disabling disease in patients who develop focal lesions. Recently, the addition of 80% deacetylated chitosan to cartilage microfractures was shown to promote the regeneration of hyaline cartilage. The molecular mechanisms by which chitosan promotes cartilage regeneration remain unknown. Because neutrophils are transiently recruited to the microfracture site, the effect of 80% deacetylated chitosan on the function of neutrophils was investigated. Most studies on neutrophils use preparations of chitosan with an uncertain degree of deacetylation. For therapeutic purposes, it is of interest to determine whether the degree of deacetylation influences the response of neutrophils to chitosan. The effect of 95% deacetylated chitosan on the function of neutrophils was therefore also investigated and compared with that of 80% deacetylated chitosan.Methods Human blood neutrophils from healthy donors were isolated by centrifugation on Ficoll-Paque. Chemotaxis was performed using the chemoTX system. Production of superoxide anions was evaluated using the cytochrome c reduction assay. Degranulation was determined by evaluating the release of myeloperoxidase and lactoferrin. The internalization of fluorescently labelled 80% deacetylated chitosan by neutrophils was studied by confocal microscopy.Results Neutrophils were dose dependently attracted to 80% deacetylated chitosan. In contrast, 95% deacetylated chitosan was not chemotactic for neutrophils. Moreover, the majority of the chemotactic effect of 80% deacetylated chitosan was mediated by phospholipase-A(2)-derived bioactive lipids. Contrary to the induction of chemotaxis, neither 80% nor 95% deacetylated chitosan activated the release of granule enzymes or the generation of active oxygen species. Despite the distinct response of neutrophils toward 80% and 95% deacetylated chitosan, both chitosans were internalized by neutrophils.Conclusions Eighty per cent deacetylated chitosan induces a phenotype in neutrophils that is distinct from the classical phenotype induced by pro-inflammatory agents. Our observations also indicate that the degree of deacetylation is an important factor to consider in the use of chitosan as an accelerator of repair because neutrophils do not respond to 95% deacetylated chitosan
Synthetic anionic surfaces can replace microparticles in stimulating burst coagulation of blood plasma
Biomaterials are frequently evaluated for pro-coagulant activity but usually in the presence of microparticles (MPs), cell-derived vesicles in blood plasma whose phospholipid surfaces allow coagulation factors to set up as functional assemblies. We tested the hypothesis that synthetic anionic surfaces can catalyze burst thrombin activation in human blood plasma in the absence of MPs. In a thromboelastography (TEG) assay with plastic sample cups and pins, recalcified human citrated platelet-poor plasma spontaneously burst-coagulated but with an unpredictable clotting time whereas plasma depleted of MPs by ultracentrifugation failed to coagulate. Coagulation of MP-depleted plasma was restored in a dose-dependent manner by glass microbeads, hydroxyapatite nanoparticles (HA NPs), and carboxylic acid-containing anionic nanocoatings of TEG cups and pins (coated by glow-discharge plasma-polymerized ethylene containing oxygen, L-PPE:O with 4.4 and 6.8 atomic % [COOH]). Glass beads lost their pro-coagulant activity in MP-depleted plasma after their surfaces were nanocoated with hydrophobic plasma-polymerized hexamethyl disiloxane (PP-HMDSO). In FXII-depleted MP-depleted plasma, glass microbeads failed to induce coagulation, however, FXIa was sufficient to induce coagulation in a dose-dependent manner, with no effect of glass beads. These data suggest that anionic surfaces of crystalline, organic, and amorphous solid synthetic materials catalyze explosive thrombin generation in MP-depleted plasma by activating the FXII-dependent intrinsic contact pathway. The data also show that microparticles are pro-coagulant surfaces whose activity has been largely overlooked in many coagulation studies to-date. These results suggest a possible mechanism by which anionic biomaterial surfaces induce bone healing by contact osteogenesis, through fibrin clot formation in the absence of platelet activation.Fil: Contreras GarcĂa, Angel. École Polytechnique de MontrĂ©al. Department of Engineering Physics. Groupe de Physique et Technologie des Couches Minces; CanadáFil: D'elĂa, Noelia Laura. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Centro CientĂfico TecnolĂłgico Conicet - BahĂa Blanca. Instituto de QuĂmica del Sur. Universidad Nacional del Sur. Departamento de QuĂmica. Instituto de QuĂmica del Sur; Argentina. École Polytechnique de MontrĂ©al. Department of Engineering Physics; CanadáFil: DesgagnĂ©, Maxime. École Polytechnique de MontrĂ©al. Department of Engineering Physics; CanadáFil: Lafantaisie Favreau, Charles Hubert. École Polytechnique de MontrĂ©al. Department of Engineering Physics; CanadáFil: Rivard, Georges Étienne. CHU Sainte-Justine; CanadáFil: Ruiz, Juan Carlos. Universidad AutĂłnoma Metropolitana; MĂ©xicoFil: Wertheimer, Michael Robert. École Polytechnique de MontrĂ©al. Department of Engineering Physics. Groupe de Physique et Technologie des Couches Minces; Canadá. École Polytechnique de MontrĂ©al. Institute of Biomedical Engineering; CanadáFil: Messina, Paula VerĂłnica. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Centro CientĂfico TecnolĂłgico Conicet - BahĂa Blanca. Instituto de QuĂmica del Sur. Universidad Nacional del Sur. Departamento de QuĂmica. Instituto de QuĂmica del Sur; ArgentinaFil: Hoemann, Caroline Dieckmann. École Polytechnique de MontrĂ©al. Department of Engineering Physics; Canadá. École Polytechnique de MontrĂ©al. Institute of Biomedical Engineering; Canad
Bone-repair properties of biodegradable hydroxyapatite nano-rod superstructures
Nano-hydroxyapatite (nano-HAp) materials show an analogous chemical composition to the biogenic mineral components of calcified tissues and depending on their topography they may mimic the specific arrangement of the crystals in bone. In this work, we have evaluated the potential of four synthesized nano-HAp superstructures for the in vitro conditions of bone-repair. Experiments are underway to investigate the effects of the material microstructure, surface roughness and hydrophilicity on their osseo-integration, osteo-conduction and osteo-induction abilities. Materials were tested in the presence of both, rat primary osteoblasts and rabbit mesenchymal stem cells. The following aspects are discussed: (i) cytotoxicity and material degradation; (ii) rat osteoblast spreading, proliferation and differentiation; and (iii) rabbit mesenchymal stem cell adhesion on nano-HAp and nano-HAp/collagen type I coatings. We effectively prepared a material based on biomimetic HAp nano-rods displaying the appropriate surface topography, hydrophilicity and degradation properties to induce the in vitro desired cellular responses for bone bonding and healing. Cells seeded on the selected material readily attached, proliferated and differentiated, as confirmed by cell viability, mitochondrial metabolic activity, alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity and cytoskeletal integrity analysis by immunofluorescence localization of alpha-smooth muscle actin (α-SMA) protein. These results highlight the influence of material´s surface characteristics to determine their tissue regeneration potential and their future use in engineering osteogenic scaffolds for orthopedic implants.Fil: D'elĂa, Noelia Laura. Universidad Nacional del Sur; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Centro CientĂfico TecnolĂłgico BahĂa Blanca. Instituto de QuĂmica del Sur; ArgentinaFil: Mathieu, Colleen. École Polytechnique. Institute of Biomedical Engineering; CanadáFil: Hoemann, Caroline D.. École Polytechnique. Institute of Biomedical Engineering; Canadá. Groupe de Recherche en Sciences et Technologies BiomĂ©dicales; Canadá. École Polytechnique. Department of Chemical Engineering; CanadáFil: Laiuppa, Juan AndrĂ©s. Universidad Nacional del Sur. Departamento de BiologĂa, BioquĂmica y Farmacia; ArgentinaFil: Santillan, Graciela Edith. Universidad Nacional del Sur. Departamento de BiologĂa, BioquĂmica y Farmacia; ArgentinaFil: Messina, Paula Veronica. Universidad Nacional del Sur; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Centro CientĂfico TecnolĂłgico BahĂa Blanca. Instituto de QuĂmica del Sur; Argentin
Lysosomal rupture induced by structurally distinct chitosans either promotes a type 1 IFN response or activates the inflammasome in macrophages
Chitosan is a family of glucosamine and N-acetyl glucosamine polysaccharides with poorly understood immune modulating properties. Here, functional U937 macrophage responses were analyzed in response to a novel library of twenty chitosans with controlled degree of deacetylation (DDA, 60-98%), molecular weight (1 to >100 kDa), and acetylation pattern (block vs. random). Specific chitosan preparations (10 or 190 kDa 80% block DDA and 3, 5, or 10 kDa 98% DDA) either induced macrophages to release CXCL10 and IL-1ra at 5-50 mug/mL, or activated the inflammasome to release IL-1beta and PGE2 at 50-150 mug/mL. Chitosan induction of these factors required lysosomal acidification. CXCL10 production was preceded by lysosomal rupture as shown by time-dependent co-localization of galectin-3 and chitosan and slowed autophagy flux, and specifically depended on IFN-beta paracrine activity and STAT-2 activation that could be suppressed by PGE2. Chitosan induced a type I IFN paracrine response or inflammasome response depending on the extent of lysosomal rupture and cytosolic foreign body invasion. This study identifies the structural motifs that lead to chitosan-driven cytokine responses in macrophages and indicates that lysosomal rupture is a key mechanism that determines the endogenous release of either IL-1ra or IL-1beta
Subchondral pre-solidified chitosan/blood implants elicit reproducible early osteochondral wound-repair responses including neutrophil and stromal cell chemotaxis, bone resorption and repair, enhanced repair tissue integration and delayed matrix deposition
Background: In this study we evaluated a novel approach to guide the bone marrow-driven articular cartilage
repair response in skeletally aged rabbits. We hypothesized that dispersed chitosan particles implanted close to the
bone marrow degrade in situ in a molecular mass-dependent manner, and attract more stromal cells to the site in
aged rabbits compared to the blood clot in untreated controls.
Methods: Three microdrill hole defects, 1.4 mm diameter and 2 mm deep, were created in both knee trochlea of
30 month-old New Zealand White rabbits. Each of 3 isotonic chitosan solutions (150, 40, 10 kDa, 80% degree of
deaceylation, with fluorescent chitosan tracer) was mixed with autologous rabbit whole blood, clotted with Tissue
Factor to form cylindrical implants, and press-fit in drill holes in the left knee while contralateral holes received
Tissue Factor or no treatment. At day 1 or day 21 post-operative, defects were analyzed by micro-computed
tomography, histomorphometry and stereology for bone and soft tissue repair.
Results: All 3 implants filled the top of defects at day 1 and were partly degraded in situ at 21 days post-operative.
All implants attracted neutrophils, osteoclasts and abundant bone marrow-derived stromal cells, stimulated bone
resorption followed by new woven bone repair (bone remodeling) and promoted repair tissue-bone integration.
150 kDa chitosan implant was less degraded, and elicited more apoptotic neutrophils and bone resorption than 10
kDa chitosan implant. Drilled controls elicited a poorly integrated fibrous or fibrocartilaginous tissue.
Conclusions: Pre-solidified implants elicit stromal cells and vigorous bone plate remodeling through a phase involving
neutrophil chemotaxis. Pre-solidified chitosan implants are tunable by molecular mass, and could be beneficial for
augmented marrow stimulation therapy if the recruited stromal cells can progress to bone and cartilage repair
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