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Mechanical loading on cell-free polymer composite scaffold enhances in situ regeneration of fully functional Achilles tendon in a rabbit model

  • Wenbo Wang
  • , Xunxun Lin
  • , Tian Tu
  • , Zheng Guo
  • , Zhenfeng Song
  • , Yongkang Jiang
  • , Boya Zhou
  • , Dong Lei
  • , Xiansong Wang
  • , Wenjie Zhang
  • , Guangdong Zhou
  • , Bingcheng Yi
  • , Peihua Zhang
  • , Wei Liu
  • Shanghai Jiao Tong University
  • The 1st affiliated hospital of Sun Yat-sen University
  • School of Medicine
  • Zhongyuan University of Technology
  • Xinxiang Medical College
  • Donghua University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Scopus citations

Abstract

Traditional tendon engineering using cell-loaded scaffold has limited application potential due to the need of autologous cells. We hypothesize that potent mechanical loading can efficiently induce in situ Achilles tendon regeneration in a rabbit model by using a cell-free porous composite scaffold. In this study, melt-spinning was used to fabricate PGA (polyglycolic acid) and PLA (polylactic acid) filament fibers as well as non-woven PGA fibers. The PLA/PGA (4:2) filament fibers were further braided into a hybrid yarn,which was knitted into a PLA/PGA tubular mesh with potent mechanical property for sustaining natural tendon strain. The results showed that a complete cross-section of Achilles tendon created a model of full mechanical loading on the bridging scaffold, which could efficiently induce in situ tendon regeneration by promoting host cell infiltration, matrix production and tissue remodeling. Histologically, mechanical loading assisted in forming parallel aligned collagen fibers and tenocytes in a fashion similar to those of native tendon. Transmission electron microscope further demonstrated that mechanical strain induced collagen fibril development by increasing fibril diameter and forming bipolar structure, which resulted in enhanced mechanical properties. Interestingly, the synergistic effect between mechanical loading and hyaluronic acid modification was also observed on the induced tenogenic differentiation of infiltrated host fibroblasts. In conclusion, potent mechanical loading is the key inductive microenvironment for in situ tendon regeneration for this polymer-based composite scaffold with proper matrix modification, which may serve as a universal scaffold product for tendon regeneration.

Original languageEnglish
Article number213950
JournalBiomaterials Advances
Volume163
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2024

Keywords

  • Cell-free approach
  • HA modification
  • In situ tendon regeneration
  • Mechanical loading
  • PLA/PGA composite tendon scaffold
  • Rabbit Achilles tendon model

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