Neuritogenic glycosaminoglycan hydrogels promote functional recovery after severe traumatic brain injury

Publication date

2024-06-27

Authors

Gonsalves, Nathan
Sun, Min Kyong
Chopra, PradeepISNI 0000000518029431
Latchoumane, Charles-Francois
Bajwa, Simar
Tang, Ruiping
Patel, Bianca
Boons, Geert-JanORCID 0000-0003-3111-5954ISNI 0000000120249047
Karumbaiah, Lohitash

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Objective. Severe traumatic brain injury (sTBI) induced neuronal loss and brain atrophy contribute significantly to long-term disabilities. Brain extracellular matrix (ECM) associated chondroitin sulfate (CS) glycosaminoglycans promote neural stem cell (NSC) maintenance, and CS hydrogel implants have demonstrated the ability to enhance neuroprotection, in preclinical sTBI studies. However, the ability of neuritogenic chimeric peptide (CP) functionalized CS hydrogels in promoting functional recovery, after controlled cortical impact (CCI) and suction ablation (SA) induced sTBI, has not been previously demonstrated. We hypothesized that neuritogenic (CS)CP hydrogels will promote neuritogenesis of human NSCs, and accelerate brain tissue repair and functional recovery in sTBI rats. Approach. We synthesized chondroitin 4-O sulfate (CS-A)CP, and 4,6-O-sulfate (CS-E)CP hydrogels, using strain promoted azide-alkyne cycloaddition (SPAAC), to promote cell adhesion and neuritogenesis of human NSCs, in vitro; and assessed the ability of (CS-A)CP hydrogels in promoting tissue and functional repair, in a novel CCI-SA sTBI model, in vivo. Main results. Results indicated that (CS-E)CP hydrogels significantly enhanced human NSC aggregation and migration via focal adhesion kinase complexes, when compared to NSCs in (CS-A)CP hydrogels, in vitro. In contrast, NSCs encapsulated in (CS-A)CP hydrogels differentiated into neurons bearing longer neurites and showed greater spontaneous activity, when compared to those in (CS-E)CP hydrogels. The intracavitary implantation of (CS-A)CP hydrogels, acutely after CCI-SA-sTBI, prevented neuronal and axonal loss, as determined by immunohistochemical analyses. (CS-A)CP hydrogel implanted animals also demonstrated the significantly accelerated recovery of ‘reach-to-grasp’ function when compared to sTBI controls, over a period of 5-weeks. Significance. These findings demonstrate the neuritogenic and neuroprotective attributes of (CS)CP ‘click’ hydrogels, and open new avenues for the development of multifunctional glycomaterials that are functionalized with biorthogonal handles for sTBI repair.

Keywords

SPAAC click chemistry, chimeric peptide, chondroitin sulfate glycosaminoglycans, reach-to-grasp function, traumatic brain injury, Biomedical Engineering, Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience

Citation

Gonsalves, N, Sun, M K, Chopra, P, Latchoumane, C-F, Bajwa, S, Tang, R, Patel, B, Boons, G-J & Karumbaiah, L 2024, 'Neuritogenic glycosaminoglycan hydrogels promote functional recovery after severe traumatic brain injury', Journal of Neural Engineering, vol. 21, no. 3, 036058. https://doi.org/10.1088/1741-2552/ad5108