Dual scaffold delivery of miR-210 mimic and miR-16 inhibitor enhances angiogenesis and osteogenesis to accelerate bone healing: Dual MicroRNA Delivery Accelerates Bone Healing

  • Irene Mencía Castaño
  • , Rosanne M. Raftery
  • , Gang Chen
  • , Brenton Cavanagh
  • , Brian Quinn
  • , Garry P. Duffy
  • , Caroline M. Curtin
  • , Fergal J. O'Brien

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Angiogenesis is critical for successful bone repair, and interestingly, miR-210 and miR-16 possess counter-active targets involved in both angiogenesis and osteogenesis: miR-210 acts as an activator by silencing EFNA3 & AcvR1b, while miR-16 inhibits both pathways by silencing VEGF & Smad5. It was thus hypothesized that dual delivery of both a miR-210 mimic and a miR-16 inhibitor from a collagen-nanohydroxyapatite scaffold system may hold significant potential for bone repair. Therefore, this systems potential to rapidly accelerate bone repair by directing enhanced angiogenic-osteogenic coupling in host cells in a rat calvarial defect model at a very early 4 week timepoint was assessed. In vitro, the treatment significantly enhanced angiogenic-osteogenic coupling of human mesenchymal stem cells, with enhanced calcium deposition after just 10 days in 2D and 14 days on scaffolds. In vivo, these dual-miRNA loaded scaffolds showed more than double bone volume and vessel recruitment increased 2.3 fold over the miRNA-free scaffolds. Overall, this study demonstrates the successful development of a dual-miRNA mimic/inhibitor scaffold for enhanced in vivo bone repair for the first time, and the possibility of extending this ‘off-the-shelf’ platform system to applications beyond bone offers immense potential to impact a myriad of other tissue engineering areas. Statement of significance: miRNAs have potential as a new class of bone healing therapeutics as they can enhance the regenerative capacity of bone-forming cells. However, angiogenic-osteogenic coupling is critical for successful bone repair. Therefore, this study harnesses the delivery of miR-210, known to be an activator of both angiogenesis and osteogenesis, and miR-16 inhibitor, as miR-16 is known to inhibit both pathways, from a collagen-nanohydroxyapatite scaffold system to rapidly enhance osteogenesis in vitro and bone repair in vivo in a rat calvarial defect model. Overall, it describes the successful development of the first dual-miRNA mimic/inhibitor scaffold for enhanced in vivo bone repair. This ‘off-the-shelf’ platform system offers immense potential to extend beyond bone applications and impact a myriad of other tissue engineering areas.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)480-493
Number of pages14
JournalActa Biomaterialia
Volume172
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Angiogenesis
  • Bone repair
  • Dual delivery
  • Gene therapy
  • microRNA
  • miR-16
  • miR-210
  • Nano-hydroxyapatite
  • Non-viral vector
  • Scaffold

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