4.8 Article

Recapitulation of In Situ Endochondral Ossification Using an Injectable Hypoxia-Mimetic Hydrogel

Journal

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
Volume 31, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adfm.202008515

Keywords

endochondral ossification; hypoxia mimetics; injectable PEGS; PAA hydrogels; in situ iron chelation

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31771040, 31971264]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China for Innovative Research Groups [51621002]
  3. Leading talents in Shanghai in 2017

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An injectable hydrogel has been developed to mimic hypoxia and replicate endochondral ossification through iron chelation, promoting bone regeneration.
Due to the limited ability for perfusion, traditional intramembranous ossification (IMO) often fails to recapitulate the natural regeneration process of most long bones and craniofacial bones. Alternatively, endochondral ossification (ECO) strategy has emerged and has been evidenced to circumvent the drawbacks in the routine application of IMO. Here, an injectable, poly(glycerol sebacate)-co-poly (ethylene glycol)/polyacrylic acid (PEGS/PAA) hydrogels are successfully developed to induce a hypoxia-mimicking environment and subsequently recapitulate ECO via in situ iron chelation. With the incorporation of PAA, these hydrogels present remarkable viscoelasticity and high efficacy of iron ion-chelating after injection, giving rise to the activation of HIF-1 alpha signaling pathway and suppression of inflammatory responses, and thereby improving chondrogenic differentiation in the early stage and facilitating vascularization in the later stage, which consequently trigger typical ECO. More importantly, through sustained and stable expression of HIF-1 alpha regulated by PEGS/PAA hydrogels throughout the regeneration, a harmonious chondrogenic/osteogenic balance can be struck and thereby accelerating the progress of ECO compared to the PEGS. The findings provide an efficient strategy to achieve in situ ECO via biomaterial-based iron ion-chelating and ensuing hypoxia-mimicking, representing a novel and promising concept for future application in bone regeneration.

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