4.8 Article

Crimped nanofiber scaffold mimicking tendon-to-bone interface for fatty-infiltrated massive rotator cuff repair

Journal

BIOACTIVE MATERIALS
Volume 16, Issue -, Pages 149-161

Publisher

KEAI PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bioactmat.2022.01.031

Keywords

Massive rotator cuff tear; Fatty infiltration; Nanofiber scaffold; Crimped structure; Tendon-to-bone interface

Funding

  1. Instrumental Analysis Center of Shanghai Jiao Tong Uni-versity
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81902186, 81671920, 31972923, 81871753, 81772341]
  3. National Key Research and Development Pro-gram of China [2018YFC1106200, 2018YFC1106201, 2018YFC1106202]
  4. Technology Support Project of Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality of China [19441901700, 19441901701, 19441901702, 18441902800]

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This study prepared electrospun nanofiber scaffolds with crimped nanofibers and welded joints to mimic the natural microstructure of tendon-to-bone insertion. It demonstrated the effectiveness of the scaffolds in repairing rotator cuff tears in a rabbit model.
Electrospun fibers, with proven ability to promote tissue regeneration, are widely being explored for rotator cuff repairing. However, without post treatment, the microstructure of the electrospun scaffold is vastly different from that of natural extracellular matrix (ECM). Moreover, during mechanical loading, the nanofibers slip that hampers the proliferation and differentiation of migrating stem cells. Here, electrospun nanofiber scaffolds, with crimped nanofibers and welded joints to biomimic the intricate natural microstructure of tendon-to-bone insertion, were prepared using poly(ester-urethane)urea and gelatin via electrospinning and double crosslinking by a multi-bonding network densification strategy. The crimped nanofiber scaffold (CNS) features bionic tensile stress and induces chondrogenic differentiation, laying credible basis for in vivo experimentation. After repairing a rabbit massive rotator cuff tear using a CNS for 3 months, the continuous translational tendon-to-bone interface was fully regenerated, and fatty infiltration was simultaneously inhibited. Instead of micro-CT, mu CT was employed to visualize the integrity and intricateness of the three-dimensional microstructure of the CNS-induced-healed tendon-to-bone interface at an ultra-high resolution of less than 1 mu m. This study sheds light on the correlation between nanofiber post treatment and massive rotator cuff repair and provides a general strategy for crimped nanofiber preparation and tendon-to-bone interface imaging characterization.

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