A Balance between Pro‐Inflammatory and Pro‐Reparative Macrophages is Observed in Regenerative D‐MAPS

Author:

Liu Yining1ORCID,Suarez‐Arnedo Alejandra1,Shetty Shamitha1ORCID,Wu Yaoying1ORCID,Schneider Michelle2,Collier Joel H.1,Segura Tatiana13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering Duke University 101 Science Drive, Campus Box 90281 Durham NC 27708‐0281 USA

2. Department of Pathology Duke University DUMC 3712 Durham NC 27710 USA

3. Department of Medicine Neurology Dermatology Duke University Bryan Research Building, Research Drive Durham NC 27710 USA

Abstract

AbstractMicroporous annealed particle scaffolds (MAPS) are a new class of granular materials generated through the interlinking of tunable microgels, which produce an interconnected network of void space. These microgel building blocks can be designed with different mechanical or bio‐active parameters to facilitate cell infiltration and modulate host response. Previously, changing the chirality of the microgel crosslinking peptides from L‐ to D‐amino acids led to significant tissue regeneration and functional recovery in D‐MAPS‐treated cutaneous wounds. In this study, the immunomodulatory effect of D‐MAPS in a subcutaneous implantation model is investigated. How macrophages are the key antigen‐presenting cells to uptake and present these biomaterials to the adaptive immune system is uncovered. A robust linker‐specific IgG2b/IgG1 response to D‐MAPS is detected as early as 14 days post‐implantation. The fine balance between pro‐regenerative and pro‐inflammatory macrophage phenotypes is observed in D‐MAPS as an indicator for regenerative scaffolds. The work offers valuable insights into the temporal cellular response to synthetic porous scaffolds and establishes a foundation for further optimization of immunomodulatory pro‐regenerative outcomes.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),General Materials Science,General Chemical Engineering,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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