Mangesh M. Kulkarni , Branimir Popovic , Alexis L. Nolfi , Clint D. Skillen , Bryan N. Brown
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
All implanted materials inevitably trigger an acute inflammatory response. The long-term outcome, however, is dependent on the trajectory of this response. This study investigates the effects of aging on the immune response to two commercially available biomaterials. Extracellular matrix-based urinary bladder matrix (UBM) and synthetic polypropylene mesh (PPM) were implanted in young (4 months) and aged (18 months) C57BL/6J mice. Overall, PPM led to a sustained inflammatory response regardless of the age of the mice. In contrast, UBM induced an initial inflammatory response that matured into a pro-regenerative/remodeling response with time, though aged mice exhibited a delayed resolution of inflammation. The PPM-induced response was predominantly pro-inflammatory with consistently higher M1-like macrophage phenotype, whereas the response to UBM was characterized by an anti-inflammatory M2-like phenotype, especially in young mice. RNA sequencing revealed marked age-related differences in gene transcription. At day 7 post-implantation, the young mice with UBM showed a robust upregulation of both pro- and anti-inflammatory pathways as compared to young mice implanted with PPM, however, by day 14, the gene expression profile transitioned into an anti-inflammatory profile. Intriguingly, in aged mice, the response to UBM was distinct with consistent downregulation of inflammatory genes compared to PPM, while the response to PPM in both young and aged animals was largely consistent. Upstream analysis identified cytokines as key drivers of the host response, with IL-4 and IL-13 in young mice, and TNF-α and IL-1β driving chronic inflammation in aged mice. These findings highlight the importance of host age in biomaterial outcome, and the potential of ECM-based materials to mount a favorable response even in the presence of age-related immune dysregulation.
期刊介绍:
Biomaterials is an international journal covering the science and clinical application of biomaterials. A biomaterial is now defined as a substance that has been engineered to take a form which, alone or as part of a complex system, is used to direct, by control of interactions with components of living systems, the course of any therapeutic or diagnostic procedure. It is the aim of the journal to provide a peer-reviewed forum for the publication of original papers and authoritative review and opinion papers dealing with the most important issues facing the use of biomaterials in clinical practice. The scope of the journal covers the wide range of physical, biological and chemical sciences that underpin the design of biomaterials and the clinical disciplines in which they are used. These sciences include polymer synthesis and characterization, drug and gene vector design, the biology of the host response, immunology and toxicology and self assembly at the nanoscale. Clinical applications include the therapies of medical technology and regenerative medicine in all clinical disciplines, and diagnostic systems that reply on innovative contrast and sensing agents. The journal is relevant to areas such as cancer diagnosis and therapy, implantable devices, drug delivery systems, gene vectors, bionanotechnology and tissue engineering.