Dual growth factor delivery from degradable oligo(poly(ethylene glycol) fumarate) hydrogel scaffolds for cartilage tissue engineering

0301 basic medicine Tissue Engineering Polyesters degradable hydrogel cartilage tissue engineering Hydrogels dual growth factor delivery Polyethylene Glycols Transforming Growth Factor beta1 03 medical and health sciences Cartilage Drug Delivery Systems Transforming Growth Factor beta enzymatic degradation Gelatin Collagenases Insulin-Like Growth Factor I gelatin microparticles
DOI: 10.1016/j.jconrel.2004.07.004 Publication Date: 2004-08-17T13:09:01Z
ABSTRACT
This work describes the development of a non-invasive means of simultaneously delivering insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) and transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) to injured cartilage tissue in a controlled manner. This novel delivery technology employs the water-soluble polymer, oligo(poly(ethylene glycol) fumarate) (OPF), in the fabrication of biodegradable hydrogels which encapsulate gelatin microparticles. Release studies first examined the effect of gelatin isoelectric point (IEP) and crosslinking extent on IGF-1 release from these microparticles. In the presence of collagenase, highly crosslinked, acidic gelatin (IEP=5.0) provided sustained release of IGF-1, 95.2+/-2.9% cumulative release at day 28, while less crosslinked microparticles and microparticles of alternate IEP exhibited similar release values after only 6 days. Encapsulation of these highly crosslinked microparticles in a network of OPF provided a means to further control release, reducing final cumulative release to 70.2+/-4.7% in collagenase-containing PBS. Final release values from OPF-gelatin microparticle composites could be altered by incorporating less crosslinked, non-loaded microparticles within these constructs. Finally, this technology was extended to the dual delivery of IGF-1 and TGF-beta1 by loading these growth factors into either the OPF hydrogel phase or gelatin microparticle phase of composites. Release profiles were successfully manipulated by altering the phase of growth factor loading and microparticle crosslinking extent. For instance, by loading TGF-beta1 into the gelatin microparticle phase, a burst release of 10.8+/-0.7% was achieved, while loading this growth factor into the OPF hydrogel phase resulted in a burst release of 25.2+/-1.5%. With either system, simultaneous, slow release of IGF-1 over a 4-week period was accomplished by selectively loading this protein into highly crosslinked, encapsulated microparticles. These results demonstrate the utility of these systems in future studies to assess the interplay and time course of multiple growth factors in cartilage repair.
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