4.7 Article

Bioresponsive Dextrin-rhEGF Conjugates: In Vitro Evaluation in Models Relevant to Its Proposed Use as a Treatment for Chronic Wounds

Journal

MOLECULAR PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 7, Issue 3, Pages 699-707

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/mp9002656

Keywords

Polymer therapeutics; chronic wounds; dextrin-epidermal growth factor conjugate; fibroblasts; keratinocytes

Funding

  1. Healing Foundation [1078666]
  2. Welsh Office for Research and Development (WORD)
  3. EPSRC [EPIC 01322011]
  4. British Council Treaty of Windsor Programme, Lisbon

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We recently developed a bioresponsive dextrin-recombinant human epidermal growth factor (rhEGF) conjugate as a polymer therapeutic with potential for use in the promotion of tissue repair. The aim of these studies was to use patient-derived wound fluid and fibroblasts to evaluate its potential for further development as a treatment for chronic wounds, such as venous leg ulceration, a growing clinical challenge in the aging population. First, the levels of EGF (ELISA assay), alpha-amylase and elastase (enzyme assays) were measured in patient-derived acute and chronic wound fluid. EGF was detected in acute, but not in chronic wound fluid. alpha-Amylase concentrations were higher in acute (188 IU/L), compared to chronic wound fluid (52 IU/L), but both were in the range of human serum levels. Although elastase was present in chronic wound fluid (2.1 +/- 1.2 RFU/min), none was detected in acute wound fluid. Dextrin-rhEGF incubation in chronic wound fluid led to endogenous a-amylase-mediated release of rhEGF (ELISA) that was maximal at 48 h. When the migration of HaCaT keratinocytes and of human fibroblasts (isolated from patient-matched, normal skin and chronic dermal wounds) was studied in vitro using the scratch wound assay, enhanced cell migration was observed in response to both free rhEGF and a-amylase-activated dextrin-rhEGF conjugate compared to controls. In addition, fibroblasts displayed increased proliferation (normal dermal fibroblasts similar to 160%; chronic wound fibroblasts similar to 140%) following incubation (72 h) with dextrin-rhEGF that had been exposed to physiological levels of alpha-amylase (93 IU/L). These results suggest further preclinical in vivo evaluation of dextrin-rhEGF is warranted to determine whether conjugate pharmacokinetics and rhEGF liberation into such a complex and aggressive environment can still lead to bioactivity.

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