4.6 Article

A novel protein-engineered hepatocyte growth factor analog released via a shear-thinning injectable hydrogel enhances post-infarction ventricular function

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOENGINEERING
Volume 114, Issue 10, Pages 2379-2389

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bit.26345

Keywords

hydrogel; angiogenesis; growth factor; myocardial regeneration; myocardial infarction

Funding

  1. Stanford Bio-X Seed Grant [IIP-7-75]
  2. Stanford Cardiovascular Institute
  3. NIH NIGMS Training Grant in Biotechnology [5T32GM008412]
  4. Stanford Neuroscience Institute Interdisciplinary Scholar Award
  5. NIH [R01 CA151706, R01 HL089315-01, R21 EB020235]
  6. Stanford-Agilent Fellowship
  7. Stanford NIST Predoctoral Fellowship
  8. Siebel Scholars Award
  9. California Institute of Regenerative Medicine CIRM [RT3-07948]

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In the last decade, numerous growth factors and biomaterials have been explored for the treatment of myocardial infarction (MI). While pre-clinical studies have demonstrated promising results, clinical trials have been disappointing and inconsistent, likely due to poor translatability. In the present study, we investigate a potential myocardial regenerative therapy consisting of a protein-engineered dimeric fragment of hepatocyte growth factor (HGFdf) encapsulated in a shear-thinning, self-healing, bioengineered hydrogel (SHIELD). We hypothesized that SHIELD would facilitate targeted, sustained intramyocardial delivery of HGFdf thereby attenuating myocardial injury and post-infarction remodeling. Adult male Wistar rats (n=45) underwent sham surgery or induction of MI followed by injection of phosphate buffered saline (PBS), 10g HGFdf alone, SHIELD alone, or SHIELD encapsulating 10g HGFdf. Ventricular function, infarct size, and angiogenic response were assessed 4weeks post-infarction. Treatment with SHIELD+HGFdf significantly reduced infarct size and increased both ejection fraction and borderzone arteriole density compared to the controls. Thus, sustained delivery of HGFdf via SHIELD limits post-infarction adverse ventricular remodeling by increasing angiogenesis and reducing fibrosis. Encapsulation of HGFdf in SHIELD improves clinical translatability by enabling minimally-invasive delivery and subsequent retention and sustained administration of this novel, potent angiogenic protein analog. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2017;114: 2379-2389. (c) 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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