Binary scaffold facilitates in situregeneration of axons and neurons for complete spinal cord injury repairElectronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/d0bm02212h

Bibliographic Details
Title: Binary scaffold facilitates in situregeneration of axons and neurons for complete spinal cord injury repairElectronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/d0bm02212h
Authors: Liu, Dingyang, Shu, Muya, Liu, Weiyuan, Shen, Yeyu, Long, Ge, Zhao, Yannan, Hou, Xianglin, Xiao, Zhifeng, Dai, Jianwu, Li, Xing
Source: Biomaterials Science; 2021, Vol. 9 Issue: 8 p2955-2971, 17p
Abstract: The limited regrowth of transected axons and insufficient regeneration of lost neurons in adult mammals collectively hinder complete spinal cord injury (SCI) repair. Hence, designing an ideal bio-scaffold which could coordinate the regeneration of axons and neurons in situmight be able to effectively facilitate the reconstruction of neural circuits and the recovery of nerve function after complete SCI. In this study, a sponge-like collagen scaffold with good drug release characteristics and good nerve cell compatibility was prepared and used as a drug delivery platform. When doubly modified with Taxol liposomes and collagen-binding neurotrophic factor 3, the scaffold dually alleviated myelin-derived inhibition on neurite outgrowth of neurons and neuronal differentiation of neural stem cells in vitro. Meanwhile, the binary-drug modified scaffold was also able to simultaneously promote both axonal and neuronal regeneration when implanted into a complete transected SCI model. Additionally, the regenerated axons and neurons throughout the lesion site formed extensive synaptic connections. Finally, complete SCI rats that received binary scaffold implantation exhibited optimal neuroelectrophysiological recovery and hindlimb locomotor improvement. Taken together, implantation of the binary scaffold can establish neural bridging networks for functional recovery, representing a clinically promising strategy for complete SCI repair.
Database: Supplemental Index
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ISSN:20474830
20474849
DOI:10.1039/d0bm02212h
Published in:Biomaterials Science
Language:English