Publication | Open Access
Scaffold-mediated BMP-2 minicircle DNA delivery accelerated bone repair in a mouse critical-size calvarial defect model
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References
2016
Year
Tissue EngineeringEngineeringBone RepairGene DeliveryBiomedical EngineeringOsteoporosisOrthopaedic SurgeryRegenerative MedicineSynthetic Bone SubstituteBone Morphogenic ProteinRegenerative BiomaterialsTranslational Tissue EngineeringBone RemodelingScaffold-mediated Gene DeliveryRegenerative EngineeringStem Cell TherapiesFunctional Tissue EngineeringCell BiologyTissue RegenerationGene TherapiesStem Cell EngineeringFracture HealingHard Tissue EngineeringPlga ScaffoldsMedicine
Scaffold-mediated gene delivery holds great promise for tissue regeneration. However, previous attempts to induce bone regeneration using scaffold-mediated non-viral gene delivery rarely resulted in satisfactory healing. We report a novel platform with sustained release of minicircle DNA (MC) from PLGA scaffolds to accelerate bone repair. MC was encapsulated inside PLGA scaffolds using supercritical CO2 , which showed prolonged release of MC. Skull-derived osteoblasts transfected with BMP-2 MC in vitro result in higher osteocalcin gene expression and mineralized bone formation. When implanted in a critical-size mouse calvarial defect, scaffolds containing luciferase MC lead to robust in situ protein production up to at least 60 days. Scaffold-mediated BMP-2 MC delivery leads to substantially accelerated bone repair as early as two weeks, which continues to progress over 12 weeks. This platform represents an efficient, long-term nonviral gene delivery system, and may be applicable for enhancing repair of a broad range of tissues types. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part A: 104A: 2099-2107, 2016.
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