Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Activating angiogenic and immunomodulatory potential of stem cells through optimized cultivation strategies presents significant opportunities for cell-based tissue therapeutics. Among others, hydrogels with tunable chemo-mechanical properties offer optimal 3D environments for stem cell functions. Here, we report rigidity sensing and mechanoresponses of mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) in 3D hydrogels drive therapeutic effects in ischemic injury. We introduce a silk-collagen (SC) binary-protein system, engineered for high viscoelasticity and cell adhesion, to facilitate mechanosensing through integrins and the actin cytoskeleton. Notably, MSC mechanoresponses, such as actomyosin contractility and cell spreading in SC hydrogels, closely correlate with their pro-angiogenic and anti-inflammatory capacity. We identified key mechanotransduction pathways, including Rho/Rho-associated protein kinase and focal adhesion kinase (FAK)/proto-oncogene tyrosine-protein kinase Src (Src) signaling, as critical regulators of these therapeutic functions. Pharmacological intervention revealed FAK-Src signaling is essential for cytoskeletal remodeling and angiogenesis while simultaneously mediating anti-inflammatory effects. These findings underscore the interplay between cell mechanophenotype, morphology, and function, providing a strategy to optimize hydrogel-based MSC therapies. In a mouse model of ischemic hindlimb injury, mechano-primed MSCs delivered via SC hydrogels significantly improved blood reperfusion, cell survival, and anti-inflammatory responses, ultimately preventing limb loss. This study highlights the importance of controlling hydrogel mechanics and cellular mechanophenotype to enhance stem cell functions for regenerative therapies.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12305335PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bioactmat.2025.07.027DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

angiogenic immunomodulatory
8
ischemic injury
8
stem cells
8
stem cell
8
cell functions
8
cell
6
mechanosignaling morphological
4
morphological adaptation
4
adaptation mscs
4
mscs response
4

Similar Publications

Breast cancer remains the most frequently diagnosed malignancy and a leading cause of cancer-related mortality among women worldwide. Increasing evidence underscores the pivotal yet paradoxical roles of innate immune cells and their associated cytokines in orchestrating the dynamic landscape of the breast tumor immune microenvironment (TIME). Innate immune effectors, including tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) and natural killer (NK) cells, exert dual functions by either initiating robust antitumor responses or facilitating immune evasion, metastatic dissemination, and therapeutic resistance.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Historical medical texts can reveal overlooked therapeutic approaches relevant to modern ophthalmology. This perspective revisits a remedy from the Babylonian Talmud prescribing a mixture of scorpion and kohl for an eye condition called buruqti (also transliterated as beroketi), traditionally translated as cataract. Through philological, zoological, and pathological analysis, we argue that buruqti likely refers to a corneal or conjunctival lesion rather than a true lens opacity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Adipose-derived cellular therapies, including stromal vascular fraction (SVF) and adipose-derived stem cells (ASCs), have demonstrated increasing therapeutic potential across regenerative medicine applications. This narrative review examines the current evidence supporting the use of SVF and ASCs in 2 primary clinical contexts: osteoarthritis (OA) and chronic wound healing. SVF, a heterogeneous cell population isolated from lipoaspirated fat via enzymatic or mechanical methods, and ASCs, a more homogeneous culture-expanded mesenchymal cell product, both exert regenerative effects through angiogenic, immunomodulatory, and reparative mechanisms.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Bone defect repair is a complex physiological process, starting with early modulation by the inflammatory immune system, and involves multiple physiological events, including angiogenesis, osteogenic differentiation, and mineralization. Biomaterial can regulate inflammatory responses through relevant immune cells in the local immune microenvironment of the implant-bone interface which is a hot topic in the field of regenerative medicine. Currently, Mg regulates immune cells in the bone microenvironment to promote osteogenesis and angiogenesis mainly focuses on macrophages,but there is relatively little research on T cells.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) frequently leads to chronic neurovascular dysfunction, yet mechanistic insights into human-specific responses have been limited by the absence of long-term, multicellular in vitro models. Here, we report a five-cell-type human neurovascular culture system, comprising endothelial cells, astrocytes, pericytes, microglia, and neurons, engineered within a 3D scaffold to study injury-induced remodeling over multiple weeks. This PENTA-culture platform recapitulates hallmark features of the neurovascular unit and enables dissection of cell-specific contributions to vascular repair and degeneration.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF