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Download fileDevelopment of a Nanomedicine loaded Hydrogel for Sustained Delivery of an Angiogenic Growth Factor to the Ischaemic Myocardium
journal contribution
posted on 2020-03-19, 13:52 authored by Joanne O'Dwyer, Robert MurphyRobert Murphy, Eimear B. Dolan, Lenka Kovarova, Vladimir Velebny, Andreas HeiseAndreas Heise, Garry
P. Duffy, Sally-Ann CryanSally-Ann CryanThe 5-year mortality rate for heart failure borders on 50%. The main
cause is an ischaemic cardiac event where blood supply to the tissue is
lost and cell death occurs. Over time, this damage spreads and the heart
is no longer able to pump efficiently. Increasing vascularisation of
the affected area has been shown to reduce patient symptoms. The growth
factors required to do this have short half-lives making development of
an efficacious therapy difficult. Herein, the angiogenic growth factor
Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) is complexed electrostatically
with star-shaped or linear polyglutamic acid (PGA) polypeptides.
Optimised PGA-VEGF nanomedicines provide VEGF encapsulation of > 99%
and facilitate sustained release of VEGF for up to 28 days in vitro. The
star-PGA-VEGF nanomedicines are loaded into a percutaneous delivery
compliant hyaluronic acid hydrogel. Sustained release of VEGF from the
composite nano-in-gel system is evident for up to 35 days and the
released VEGF has comparable bioactivity to free, fresh VEGF when tested
on both Matrigel® and scratch assays. The final
star-PGA-VEGF nanomedicine-loaded hydrogel is biocompatible and provides
sustained release of bioactive VEGF. Therefore, we report the
development of novel, self-assembling PGA-VEGF nanomedicines and their
incorporation into a hyaluronic acid hydrogel that is compatible with
medical devices to enable minimally invasive delivery to the heart. The
final star-PGA-VEGF nanomedicine-loaded hydrogel is biocompatible and
provides sustained release of bioactive VEGF. This formulation provides
the basis for optimal spatiotemporal delivery of an angiogenic growth
factor to the ischaemic myocardium.