Background: The nerve autograft remains the gold standard when reconstructing peripheral nerve defects. However, although autograft repair can result in useful functional recovery, poor outcomes are common, and better treatments are needed. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of purified exosome product on functional motor recovery and nerve-related gene expression in a rat sciatic nerve reverse autograft model. Methods: Ninety-six Sprague-Dawley rats were divided into three experimental groups. In each group, a unilateral 10-mm sciatic nerve defect was created. The excised nerve was reversed and used to reconstruct the defect. Group I animals received the reversed autograft alone, group II animals received the reversed autograft with fibrin glue, and group III animals received the reversed autograft with purified exosome product suspended in the fibrin glue. The animals were killed at 3 and 7 days and 12 and 16 weeks after surgery. Evaluation included compound muscle action potentials, isometric tetanic force, tibialis anterior muscle wet weight, nerve regeneration–related gene expression, and nerve histomorphometry. Results: At 16 weeks, isometric tetanic force was significantly better in group III (p = 0.03). The average axon diameter of the peroneal nerve was significantly larger in group III at both 12 and 16 weeks (p = 0.015 at 12 weeks; p < 0.01 at 16 weeks). GAP43 and S100b gene expression was significantly up-regulated by purified exosome product. Conclusions: Local administration of purified exosome product demonstrated improved nerve regeneration profiles in the reverse sciatic nerve autograft rat model. Thus, purified exosome product may have beneficial effects on nerve regeneration, gene profiles, and motor outcomes.
Urinary incontinence afflicts up to 40% of adult women in the United States. Stress urinary incontinence (SUI) accounts for approximately one-third of these cases, precipitating ~200,000 surgical procedures annually. Continence is maintained through the interplay of sub-urethral support and urethral sphincter coaptation, particularly during activities that increase intra-abdominal pressure. Currently, surgical correction of SUI focuses on the re-establishment of sub-urethral support. However, mesh-based repairs are associated with foreign body reactions and poor localized tissue healing, which leads to mesh exposure, prompting the pursuit of technologies that restore external urethral sphincter function and limit surgical risk. The present work utilizes a human platelet-derived CD41a and CD9 expressing extracellular vesicle product (PEP) enriched for NF-κB and PD-L1 and derived to ensure the preservation of lipid bilayer for enhanced stability and compatibility with hydrogel-based sustained delivery approaches. In vitro, the application of PEP to skeletal muscle satellite cells in vitro drove proliferation and differentiation in an NF-κB-dependent fashion, with full inhibition of impact on exposure to resveratrol. PEP biopotentiation of collagen-1 and fibrin glue hydrogel achieved sustained exosome release at 37 °C, creating an ultrastructural “bead on a string” pattern on scanning electron microscopy. Initial testing in a rodent model of latissimus dorsi injury documented activation of skeletal muscle proliferation of healing. In a porcine model of stress urinary incontinence, delivery of PEP-biopotentiated collagen-1 induced functional restoration of the external urethral sphincter. The histological evaluation found that sustained PEP release was associated with new skeletal muscle formation and polarization of local macrophages towards the regenerative M2 phenotype. The results provided herein serve as the first description of PEP-based biopotentiation of hydrogels implemented to restore skeletal muscle function and may serve as a promising approach for the nonsurgical management of SUI.
Objectives The purpose of this study was to explore the utility of an injectable purified exosome product derived from human apheresis blood to (1) augment surgical closure of vaginal mesh exposures, and (2) serve as a stand-alone therapy for vaginal mesh exposure. Methods Sixteen polypropylene meshes (1×1–3×3 cm) were implanted in the vaginas of 7 Yorkshire-crossed pigs by urogynecologic surgeons (day 0). On day 7, group 1 underwent surgical intervention via vaginal tissue suture reclosure with (n=2 pigs, n=4 meshes) or without (n=2 pigs, n=4 meshes) exosome injection; group 2 underwent medical intervention with an exosome injection (n=3, n=8 meshes). One animal in group 2 was given oral 2′-deoxy-5-ethynyluridine to track cellular regeneration. Euthansia occurred at 5 weeks. Results Mesh exposures treated with surgical closure alone experienced reexposure of the mesh. Exosome treatment with or without surgical closure resulted in partial to full mesh exposure resolution up to 3×3 cm. Exosome-treated tissues had significantly thicker regenerated epithelial tissue (208 μm exosomes-only and 217 μm surgery+exosomes, versus 80 μm for surgery-only; P < 0.05); evaluation of 2′-deoxy-5-ethynyluridine confirmed de novo regeneration throughout the epithelium and underlying tissues. Capillary density was significantly higher in the surgery+exosomes group (P = 0.03). Surgery-only tissues had a higher inflammatory and fibrosis response as compared with exosome-treated tissues. Conclusions In this pilot study, exosome treatment augmented healing in the setting of vaginal mesh exposure, reducing the incidence of mesh reexposure after suture closure and decreasing the area of mesh exposure through de novo tissue regeneration after exosome injection only. Further study of varied local tissue conditions and mesh configurations is warranted.
To optimize the regenerative proficiency of stem cells, a cardiopoietic protein-based cocktail consisting of multiple growth factors has been developed and advanced into clinical trials for treatment of ischemic heart failure. Streamlining the inductors of cardiopoiesis would address the resource intensive nature of the current stem cell enhancement protocol. To this end, the microencapsulated-modified-mRNA (M 3 RNA) technique was here applied to introduce early cardiogenic genes into human adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells (AMSCs). A single mesodermal transcription factor, Brachyury, was sufficient to trigger high expression of cardiopoietic markers, Nkx2.5 and Mef2c. Engineered cardiopoietic stem cells (eCP) featured a transcriptome profile distinct from pre-engineered AMSCs. In vitro, eCP demonstrated protective antioxidant capacity with enhanced superoxide dismutase expression and activity; a vasculogenic secretome driving angiogenic tube formation; and macrophage polarizing immunomodulatory properties. In vivo, in a murine model of myocardial infarction, intramyocardial delivery of eCP (600 000 cells per heart) improved cardiac performance and protected against decompensated heart failure. Thus, heart repair competent stem cells, armed with antioxidant, vasculogenic, and immunomodulatory traits, are here engineered through a protein-independent single gene manipulation, expanding the available regenerative toolkit.
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