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Designing injectable beta-hairpin peptide hydrogels for cartilage tissue engineering application

Posted on:2013-10-02Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of DelawareCandidate:Sinthuvanich, ChomdaoFull Text:PDF
GTID:1454390008981485Subject:Chemistry
Abstract/Summary:
In this work, it was demonstrated that peptide-based gels having different electrostatic network character but similar mechanical properties can be designed by modulating the primary sequence of the peptides used for self-assembly. As a result, HLT2 and HET1 peptides, having formal charge states of +5 per monomer, were designed using MAX8, a peptide with a charge state of +7 per monomer, as a template. Using gels prepared from all three peptides (MAX8, HLT2, and HET1), it was shown that the electropositive character of the network influences chondrocyte behavior. Specifically, the less electropositive gel (HLT2) is able to maintain chondrocyte viability and phenotype. In contrast, chondrocytes encapsulated in the more positively charged gel (MAX8) are more prone to dedifferentiation, resulting in tissue constructs with inferior mechanical properties. Gels prepared from peptides having the same net charge but differing only in their primary sequences (HLT2 and HET1) were also shown to influence cell behavior, but only during the early period of culturing. If constructs derived from these two different peptide gels are allowed to culture for extended times, their mechanical properties become similar. This suggests that the amino acid composition and sequence of the peptides used to make the gels also influences cell behavior, but perhaps not to the extent that network electrostatics plays.;Supplementation of bioactive factors in the culturing media, as opposed to being encapsulated directly in the network, was shown to adversely affect the cellular response resulting in tissue constructs where extracellular matrix (ECM) components are non-uniformly distributed. When bioactive factors were encapsulated and co-delivered with cells, positive results were observed, particularly when cells were co-encapsulated with the growth factor, TGF-β1. The effect of TGF-β1 on cellular response and the mechanical properties of the tissue-engineered constructs is largely governed by the ability of the growth factor to be retained within the hydrogels and made available to the cells, which in turn, dictate the quality of the engineered tissue.;Rational peptide design was also employed to generate negatively charged peptides capable of folding and self-assembling under physiological conditions to afford electronegative gel. Initial designs resulted in peptides that undergo gelation in response to a change in environmental pH and temperature. Modification of these initially designed peptides led to the design of VE3 and VEQ1, two negatively charged peptides that can be used to directly encapsulate chondrocytes providing gel-cell constructs with homogeneous cellular distribution.;Finally, the positively charged peptide gel (HET1) and negatively charged peptide gel (VE3) were compared to investigate the influence of vastly different network electrostatics on the response of encapsulated primary chondrocytes. In these gels, a majority of cells were able to retain their chondrocyte phenotype within the scaffold regardless of which gel was used for encapsulation and delivery. However, the positively charge hydrogel is better at supporting cell proliferation and ECM accumulation. On the other hand, the cells encapsulated in the negatively charged hydrogel were less proliferative and the negatively charged hydrogel had a limited ability to retain ECM produced by the cells. In contrast, when culturing in the presence of TGF-β1, constructs derived from the negatively charged gel showed greater compressive moduli than those derived from the positively charged hydrogel. This difference is largely due to the amount of TGF-β1 made available to the encapsulated cells as a function of time, which was found to be governed by the electrostatic character of the hydrogel network. This work indicates that network electrostatics influence the response of encapsulated chondrocytes, retention of secreted ECM, and the diffusion of bioactive factors necessary for the generation of engineered cartilage.;During the course of these studies, I have a serendipitous discovery that a derivative of one of the material forming β-hairpin peptides displays anticancer activity. Chapter 8 describes this peptide, SVS-1, and its mechanism of action. (Abstract shortened by UMI.).
Keywords/Search Tags:Peptide, Gel, Mechanical properties, Network, Negatively charged, Tissue, HLT2, HET1
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