Cell-Material Interactions in Covalent Adaptable Thioester Hydrogels.
Journal Article
Overview
abstract
Covalent adaptable networks (CANs) are polymeric networks with cross-links that can break and reform in response to external stimuli, including pH, shear, and temperature, making them potential materials for use as injectable cell delivery vehicles. In the native niche, cells rearrange the extracellular matrix (ECM) to undergo basic functions including migration, spreading, and proliferation. Bond rearrangement enables these hydrogels to mimic viscoelastic properties of the native ECM which promote migration and delivery from the material to the native tissue. In this work, we characterize thioester CANs to inform their design as effective cell delivery vehicles. Using bulk rheology, we characterize the rearrangement of these networks when they are subjected to strain, which mimics the strain applied by a syringe, and using multiple particle tracking microrheology (MPT) we measure cell-mediated remodeling of the pericellular region. Thioester networks are formed by photopolymerizing 8-arm poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG)-thiol and PEG-thioester norbornene. Bulk rheology measures scaffold properties during low and high strain and demonstrates that thioester scaffolds can recover rheological properties after high strain is applied. We then 3D encapsulated human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) in thioester scaffolds. Using MPT, we characterize degradation in the pericellular region. Encapsulated hMSCs degrade these scaffolds within ≈4 days post-encapsulation. We hypothesize that this degradation is mainly due to cytoskeletal tension that cells apply to the matrix, causing adaptable thioester bonds to rearrange, leading to degradation. To verify this, we inhibited cytoskeletal tension using blebbistatin, a myosin-II inhibitor. Blebbistatin-treated cells can degrade these networks only by secreting enzymes including esterases. Esterases hydrolyze thioester bonds, which generate free thiols, leading to bond exchange. Around treated cells, we measure a decrease in the extent of pericellular degradation. We also compare cell area, eccentricity, and speed of untreated and treated cells. Inhibiting cytoskeletal tension results in significantly smaller cell area, more rounded cells, and lower cell speeds when compared to untreated cells. Overall, this work shows that cytoskeletal tension plays a major role in hMSC-mediated degradation of thioester networks. Cytoskeletal tension is also important for the spreading and motility of hMSCs in these networks. This work informs the design of thioester scaffolds for tissue regeneration and cell delivery.