Publications by Year: 2022

2022

Wu, David T., Mani Diba, Stephanie Yang, Benjamin R. Freedman, Alberto Elosegui-Artola, and David J. Mooney. 2022. “Hydrogel Viscoelasticity Modulates Migration and Fusion of Mesenchymal Stem Cell Spheroids”. Bioengineering & Translational Medicine 8 (3): e10464. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1002/btm2.10464.

Multicellular spheroids made of stem cells can act as building blocks that fuse to capture complex aspects of native in vivo environments, but the effect of hydrogel viscoelasticity on cell migration from spheroids and their fusion remains largely unknown. Here, we investigated the effect of viscoelasticity on migration and fusion behavior of mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) spheroids using hydrogels with a similar elasticity but different stress relaxation profiles. Fast relaxing (FR) matrices were found to be significantly more permissive to cell migration and consequent fusion of MSC spheroids. Mechanistically, inhibition of ROCK and Rac1 pathways prevented cell migration. Moreover, the combination of biophysical and biochemical cues provided by fast relaxing hydrogels and platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) supplementation, respectively, resulted in a synergistic enhancement of migration and fusion. Overall, these findings emphasize the important role of matrix viscoelasticity in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine strategies based on spheroids.

Najibi, Alexander J., Ryan S. Lane, Miguel C. Sobral, Benjamin R. Freedman, Joel Gutierrez Estupinan, Alberto Elosegui-Artola, Christina M. Tringides, et al. 2022. “Lymph Node Expansion Predicts Magnitude of Vaccine Immune Response”. BioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.10.25.513749.

Lymph nodes (LNs) dynamically expand in response to immunization, but the relationship between LN expansion and the accompanying adaptive immune response is unclear. Here, we first characterized the LN response across time and length scales to vaccines of distinct strengths. High-frequency ultrasound revealed that a bolus ‘weak’ vaccine induced a short-lived, 2-fold volume expansion, while a biomaterial-based ‘strong’ vaccine elicited an ∼7-fold LN expansion, which was maintained several weeks after vaccination. This latter expansion was associated with altered matrix and mechanical properties of the LN microarchitecture. Strong vaccination resulted in massive immune and stromal cell engagement, dependent on antigen presence in the vaccine, and conventional dendritic cells and inflammatory monocytes upregulated genes involved in antigen presentation and LN enlargement. The degree of LN expansion following therapeutic cancer vaccination strongly correlated with vaccine efficacy, even 100 days post-vaccination, and direct manipulation of LN expansion demonstrated a causative role in immunization outcomes.

Koh, Esther, Benjamin R Freedman, Farshad Ramazani, Johannes Gross, Adam Graham, Andreas Kuttler, Eckhard Weber, and David J Mooney. 2022. “Controlled Delivery of Corticosteroids Using Tunable Tough Adhesives”. Advanced Healthcare Materials 12 (3): 2201000. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1002/adhm.202201000.

Hydrogel-based drug delivery systems typically aim to release drugs locally to tissue in an extended manner. Tissue adhesive alginate-polyacrylamide tough hydrogels are recently demonstrated to serve as an extended-release system for the corticosteroid triamcinolone acetonide. Here, the stimuli-responsive controlled release of triamcinolone acetonide from the alginate-polyacrylamide tough hydrogel drug delivery systems (TADDS) and evolving new approaches to combine alginate-polyacrylamide tough hydrogel with drug-loaded nano and microparticles, generating composite TADDS is described. Stimulation with ultrasound pulses or temperature changes is demonstrated to control the release of triamcinolone acetonide from the TADDS. The incorporation of laponite nanoparticles or PLGA microparticles into the tough hydrogel is shown to further enhance the versatility to control and modulate the release of triamcinolone acetonide. A first technical exploration of a TADDS shelf-life concept is performed using lyophilization, where lyophilized TADDS are physically stable and the bioactive integrity of released triamcinolone acetonide is demonstrated. Given the tunability of properties, the TADDS are a suggested technology platform for controlled drug delivery.

Freedman, Benjamin R., David J. Mooney, and Eckhard Weber. 2022. “Advances Toward Transformative Therapies for Tendon Diseases”. Science Translational Medicine 14 (661): eabl8814. https://doi.org/10.1126/scitranslmed.abl8814.

Approved therapies for tendon diseases have not yet changed the clinical practice of symptomatic pain treatment and physiotherapy. This review article summarizes advances in the development of novel drugs, biologic products, and biomaterial therapies for tendon diseases with perspectives for translation of integrated therapies. Shifting from targeting symptom relief toward disease modification and prevention of disease progression may open new avenues for therapies. Deep evidence-based clinical, cellular, and molecular characterization of the underlying pathology of tendon diseases, as well as therapeutic delivery optimization and establishment of multidiscipline interorganizational collaboration platforms, may accelerate the discovery and translation of transformative therapies for tendon diseases.

Cintron-Cruz, Juan A., Benjamin R. Freedman, Matthew Lee, Christopher Johnson, Hamza Ijaz, and David J. Mooney. 2022. “Rapid Ultratough Topological Tissue Adhesives”. Advanced Materials 34 (35): 2205567. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.202205567.

Tissue adhesives capable of achieving strong and tough adhesion in permeable wet environments are useful in many biomedical applications. However, adhesion generated through covalent bond formation directly with the functional groups of tissues (i.e., -COOH and -NH2 groups in collagen), or using non-covalent interactions can both be limited by weak, unstable, or slow adhesion. Here, it is shown that by combining pH-responsive bridging chitosan polymer chains and a tough hydrogel dissipative matrix one can achieve unprecedented ultratough adhesion to tissues (>2000 J m−2) in 5–10 min without covalent bond formation. The strong non-covalent adhesion is shown to be stable under physiologically relevant conditions and strongly influenced by chitosan molecular weight, molecular weight of polymers in the matrix, and pH. The adhesion mechanism relies primarily on the topological entanglement between the chitosan chains and the permeable adherends. To further expand the applicability of the adhesives, adhesion time can be decreased by dehydrating the hydrogel matrix to facilitate rapid chitosan interpenetration and entanglement (>1000 J m−2 in ≤1 min). The unprecedented adhesive properties presented in this study open opportunities for new strategies in the development of non-covalent tissue adhesives and numerous bioapplications.

 
Freedman, Benjamin R, Raphael S Knecht, Yann Tinguely, Ege Eskibozkurt, Cathy S. Wang, and David J Mooney. 2022. “Aging and Matrix Viscoelasticity Affect Multiscale Tendon Properties and Tendon Derived Cell Behavior”. Acta Biomaterialia 143: 63-71. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2022.03.006.

Aging is the largest risk factor for Achilles tendon associated disorders and rupture. Although Achilles tendon macroscale elastic properties are suggested to decline with aging, less is known about the effect of maturity and aging on multiscale viscoelastic properties and their effect on tendon cell behavior. Here, we show dose dependent changes in native multiscale tendon mechanical and structural properties and uncover several nanoindentation properties predicted by tensile mechanics and echogenicity. Alginate hydrogel systems designed to mimic juvenile tendon microscale mechanics revealed that stiffness and viscoelasticity affected Achilles tendon cell aspect ratio and proliferation during aging. This knowledge provides further evidence for the negative impact of maturity and aging on tendon and begins to elucidate how viscoelasticity can control tendon derived cell morphology and expansion.

Freedman, Benjamin R ", Andreas Kuttler, and Nicolau Beckmann. (2025) 2022. “Enhanced Tendon Healing by a Tough Hydrogel With an Adhesive Side and High Drug-Loading Capacity”. "Nature Biomedical Engineering" 6 (10): 1167-79.

Hydrogels that provide mechanical support and sustainably release therapeutics have been used to treat tendon injuries. However, most hydrogels are insufficiently tough, release drugs in bursts, and require cell infiltration or suturing to integrate with surrounding tissue. Here we report that a hydrogel serving as a high-capacity drug depot and combining a dissipative tough matrix on one side and a chitosan adhesive surface on the other side supports tendon gliding and strong adhesion (larger than 1,000 J m−2) to tendon on opposite surfaces of the hydrogel, as we show with porcine and human tendon preparations during cyclic-friction loadings. The hydrogel is biocompatible, strongly adheres to patellar, supraspinatus and Achilles tendons of live rats, boosted healing and reduced scar formation in a rat model of Achilles-tendon rupture, and sustainably released the corticosteroid triamcinolone acetonide in a rat model of patellar tendon injury, reducing inflammation, modulating chemokine secretion, recruiting tendon stem and progenitor cells, and promoting macrophage polarization to the M2 phenotype. Hydrogels with ‘Janus’ surfaces and sustained-drug-release functionality could be designed for a range of biomedical applications.