Sustaining neovascularization of a scaffold through staged release of vascular endothelial growth factor-A and platelet-derived growth factor-BB

NH Davies, C Schmidt, D Bezuidenhout… - Tissue engineering Part …, 2012 - liebertpub.com
Tissue engineering Part A, 2012liebertpub.com
Tissue regeneration into a three-dimensional scaffold requires the stimulation of blood
vessel ingrowth. We have employed a freely interconnecting porous scaffold developed by
us to determine the utility of a covalently bound heparin surface coating for the delivery of
vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and platelet-derived growth factor BB (PDGF-BB)
in vivo. The heparin surface was shown to release VEGF far more rapidly than PDGF-BB in
vitro (VEGF: 75 ng/h for 24 h; PDGF-BB: 86 pg/h for> 7 days). In rat subcutaneous implants …
Tissue regeneration into a three-dimensional scaffold requires the stimulation of blood vessel ingrowth. We have employed a freely interconnecting porous scaffold developed by us to determine the utility of a covalently bound heparin surface coating for the delivery of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and platelet-derived growth factor BB (PDGF-BB) in vivo. The heparin surface was shown to release VEGF far more rapidly than PDGF-BB in vitro (VEGF: 75 ng/h for 24 h; PDGF-BB: 86 pg/h for >7 days). In rat subcutaneous implants, at 10 days the heparin surface alone increased vessel ingrowth substantially (p<0.05 vs. unmodified scaffold), release of VEGF resulted in a further increase (p<0.05 vs. heparinized scaffold), whereas PDGF-BB had no additional effect. The increase induced by the combination of growth factors was similar to VEGF alone. After 2 months, PDGF-BB, but not VEGF delivery, resulted in a substantial increase in vascularization above that induced by heparin (p<0.05). At the longer time point the combination of growth factors was similar to PDGF-BB. However, only the combination of growth factors significantly elevated the number of ingrowing arterioles (p<0.05 vs. heparinized scaffold). Thus, the covalent modification of a porous scaffold with heparin allows for the differential release of VEGF and PDGF-BB that results in both a rapid and sustained increase in scaffold vascularization.
Mary Ann Liebert
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