Peptide Hydrogels—A Tissue Engineering Strategy for the Prevention of Oesophageal Strictures

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Abstract

Endoscopic treatment of Barrett's oesophagus often leads to further damage of healthy tissue causing fibrotic tissue formation termed as strictures. This study shows that synthetic, self-assembling peptide hydrogels (PeptiGelDesign) support the activity and function of primary oesophageal cells, leading to epithelialization and stratification during in vitro 3D co-culture. Following buffering in culture media, rat oesophageal stromal fibroblasts (rOSFs) are incorporated into a library of peptide hydrogels, whereas mouse oesophageal epithelial cells (mOECs) are seeded on the surface. Optimal hydrogels (PGD-AlphaProC and PGD-CGD2) support mOEC viability (>95%), typical cell morphology (cobblestone-like), and slower migration over a shorter distance compared to a collagen control, at 48 h. Positive expression of typical epithelial markers (ZO-1 and cytokeratins) is detected using immunocytochemistry at day 3 in culture. Furthermore, optimal hydrogels are identified which support rOSF viability (>95%) with homogeneous distribution when incorporated into the hydrogels and also promote the secretion of collagen type I detected using an enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), at day 7. A 3D co-culture model using optimal hydrogels for both cell types supports a stratified epithelial layer (expressing involucrin and AE1/AE3 markers). Findings from this study could lead to the use of peptide hydrogels as a minimally invasive endoscopic therapy to manage oesophageal strictures.

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Kumar, D., Workman, V. L., O’Brien, M., McLaren, J., White, L., Ragunath, K., … Gough, J. E. (2017). Peptide Hydrogels—A Tissue Engineering Strategy for the Prevention of Oesophageal Strictures. Advanced Functional Materials, 27(38). https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.201702424

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