Synthetic Extracellular Matrices as a Toolbox to Tune Stem Cell Secretome

Publication date

2020-12-23

Authors

Liu, Kaizheng
Veenendaal, Tomas
Wiendels, Maury
Ruiz-Zapata, Alejandra M
van Laar, Justin
Kyranas, Rafail
Enting, Hilde
van Cranenbroek, Bram
Koenen, Hans J P M
Mihaila, Silvia M.ISNI 0000000492912639

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Article
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Abstract

The application of stem cell-derived secretome in regenerative therapies offers the key advantage that instead of the stem cells, only their effective paracrine compounds are in vivo delivered. Ideally, the secretome can be steered by the culture conditions of the stem cells. So far, most studies use stem cells cultured on stiff plastic substrates, not representative of their native 3D environment. In this study, cells are cultured inside synthetic polyisocyanide (PIC)-based hydrogels, which are minimal, tailorable, and highly reproducible biomimetic matrices. Secretome analysis of human adipose-derived stem cells (multiplex, ELISA) displays that matrix manipulation is a powerful tool to direct the secretome composition. As an example, cells in nonadherent PIC gels secrete increased levels of IL-10 and the conditioned media from 3D culture accelerate wound closure. In all, our PIC-based approach opens the door to dedicated matrix design to engineer the secretome for custom applications.

Keywords

synthetic extracellular matrices (ECM), stem cell secretome, polyisocyanide hydrogels, interleukin-10 (IL-10), wound healing

Citation

Liu, K, Veenendaal, T, Wiendels, M, Ruiz-Zapata, A M, van Laar, J, Kyranas, R, Enting, H, van Cranenbroek, B, Koenen, H J P M, Mihaila, S M, Oosterwijk, E & Kouwer, P H J 2020, 'Synthetic Extracellular Matrices as a Toolbox to Tune Stem Cell Secretome', ACS applied materials & interfaces, vol. 12, no. 51, pp. 56723-56730. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.0c16208