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  4. Long-lasting fibrin matrices ensure stable and functional angiogenesis by highly tunable, sustained delivery of recombinant VEGF(164)
 
research article

Long-lasting fibrin matrices ensure stable and functional angiogenesis by highly tunable, sustained delivery of recombinant VEGF(164)

Sacchi, Veronica
•
Mittermayr, Rainer
•
Hartinger, Joachim
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2014
Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America (PNAS)

Clinical trials of therapeutic angiogenesis by vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) gene delivery failed to show efficacy. Major challenges include the need to precisely control in vivo distribution of growth factor dose and duration of expression. Recombinant VEGF protein delivery could overcome these issues, but rapid in vivo clearance prevents the stabilization of induced angiogenesis. Here, we developed an optimized fibrin platform for controlled delivery of recombinant VEGF, to robustly induce normal, stable, and functional angiogenesis. Murine VEGF(164) was fused to a sequence derived from alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor (alpha(2)-PI1-8) that is a substrate for the coagulation factor fXIIIa, to allow its covalent cross-linking into fibrin hydrogels and release only by enzymatic cleavage. An alpha(2)-PI1-8-fused variant of the fibrinolysis inhibitor aprotinin was used to control the hydrogel degradation rate, which determines both the duration and effective dose of factor release. An optimized aprotinin-alpha(2)-PI1-8 concentration ensured ideal degradation over 4 wk. Under these conditions, fibrin-alpha(2)-PI1-8-VEGF(164) allowed exquisitely dose-dependent angiogenesis: concentrations >= 25 mu g/mL caused widespread aberrant vascular structures, but a 500-fold concentration range (0.01-5.0 mu g/mL) induced exclusively normal, mature, nonleaky, and perfused capillaries, which were stable after 3 mo. Optimized delivery of fibrin-alpha(2)-PI1-8-VEGF(164) was therapeutically effective both in ischemic hind limb and wound-healing models, significantly improving angiogenesis, tissue perfusion, and healing rate. In conclusion, this optimized platform ensured (i) controlled and highly tunable delivery of VEGF protein in ischemic tissue and (ii) stable and functional angiogenesis without introducing genetic material and with a limited and controllable duration of treatment. These findings suggest a strategy to improve safety and efficacy of therapeutic angiogenesis.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1073/pnas.1404605111
Web of Science ID

WOS:000335798000054

Author(s)
Sacchi, Veronica
Mittermayr, Rainer
Hartinger, Joachim
Martino, Mikael M.
Lorentz, Kristen M.
Wolbank, Susanne
Hofmann, Anna
Largo, Remo A.
Marschall, Jeffrey S.
Groppa, Elena
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Date Issued

2014

Publisher

National Academy of Sciences

Published in
Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America (PNAS)
Volume

111

Issue

19

Start page

6952

End page

6957

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LMRP  
Available on Infoscience
June 16, 2014
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/104280
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