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Regulating Blood Clot Fibrin Films to Manipulate Biomaterial-Mediated Foreign Body Responses

The clinical efficacy of implanted biomaterials is often compromised by host immune recognition and subsequent foreign body responses (FBRs). During the implantation, biomaterials inevitably come into direct contact with the blood, absorbing blood protein and forming blood clot. Many studies have be...

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Autores principales: Zou, Yang, Shan, Zhengjie, Han, Zongpu, Yang, Jieting, Lin, Yixiong, Gong, Zhuohong, Xie, Lv, Xu, Jieyun, Xie, Runlong, Chen, Zhuofan, Chen, Zetao
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: AAAS 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10503960/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37719049
http://dx.doi.org/10.34133/research.0225
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author Zou, Yang
Shan, Zhengjie
Han, Zongpu
Yang, Jieting
Lin, Yixiong
Gong, Zhuohong
Xie, Lv
Xu, Jieyun
Xie, Runlong
Chen, Zhuofan
Chen, Zetao
author_facet Zou, Yang
Shan, Zhengjie
Han, Zongpu
Yang, Jieting
Lin, Yixiong
Gong, Zhuohong
Xie, Lv
Xu, Jieyun
Xie, Runlong
Chen, Zhuofan
Chen, Zetao
author_sort Zou, Yang
collection PubMed
description The clinical efficacy of implanted biomaterials is often compromised by host immune recognition and subsequent foreign body responses (FBRs). During the implantation, biomaterials inevitably come into direct contact with the blood, absorbing blood protein and forming blood clot. Many studies have been carried out to regulate protein adsorption, thus manipulating FBR. However, the role of clot surface fibrin films formed by clotting shrinkage in host reactions and FBR is often ignored. Because of the principle of fibrin film formation being relevant to fibrinogen or clotting factor absorption, it is feasible to manipulate the fibrin film formation via tuning the absorption of fibrinogen and clotting factor. As biological hydroxyapatite reserved bone architecture and microporous structure, the smaller particle size may expose more microporous structures and adsorb more fibrinogen or clotting factor. Therefore, we set up 3 sizes (small, <0.2 mm; medium, 1 to 2 mm; large, 3 to 4 mm) of biological hydroxyapatite (porcine bone-derived hydroxyapatite) with different microporous structures to investigate the absorption of blood protein, the formation of clot surface fibrin films, and the subsequent FBR. We found that small group adsorbed more clotting factors because of more microporous structures and formed the thinnest and sparsest fibrin films. These thinnest and sparsest fibrin films increased inflammation and profibrosis of macrophages through a potential signaling pathway of cell adhesion–cytoskeleton–autophagy, leading to the stronger FBR. Large group adsorbed lesser clotting factors, forming the thickest and densest fibrin films, easing inflammation and profibrosis of macrophages, and finally mitigating FBR. Thus, this study deepens the understanding of the role of fibrin films in host recognition and FBR and demonstrates the feasibility of a strategy to regulate FBR by modulating fibrin films via tuning the absorption of blood proteins.
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spelling pubmed-105039602023-09-16 Regulating Blood Clot Fibrin Films to Manipulate Biomaterial-Mediated Foreign Body Responses Zou, Yang Shan, Zhengjie Han, Zongpu Yang, Jieting Lin, Yixiong Gong, Zhuohong Xie, Lv Xu, Jieyun Xie, Runlong Chen, Zhuofan Chen, Zetao Research (Wash D C) Research Article The clinical efficacy of implanted biomaterials is often compromised by host immune recognition and subsequent foreign body responses (FBRs). During the implantation, biomaterials inevitably come into direct contact with the blood, absorbing blood protein and forming blood clot. Many studies have been carried out to regulate protein adsorption, thus manipulating FBR. However, the role of clot surface fibrin films formed by clotting shrinkage in host reactions and FBR is often ignored. Because of the principle of fibrin film formation being relevant to fibrinogen or clotting factor absorption, it is feasible to manipulate the fibrin film formation via tuning the absorption of fibrinogen and clotting factor. As biological hydroxyapatite reserved bone architecture and microporous structure, the smaller particle size may expose more microporous structures and adsorb more fibrinogen or clotting factor. Therefore, we set up 3 sizes (small, <0.2 mm; medium, 1 to 2 mm; large, 3 to 4 mm) of biological hydroxyapatite (porcine bone-derived hydroxyapatite) with different microporous structures to investigate the absorption of blood protein, the formation of clot surface fibrin films, and the subsequent FBR. We found that small group adsorbed more clotting factors because of more microporous structures and formed the thinnest and sparsest fibrin films. These thinnest and sparsest fibrin films increased inflammation and profibrosis of macrophages through a potential signaling pathway of cell adhesion–cytoskeleton–autophagy, leading to the stronger FBR. Large group adsorbed lesser clotting factors, forming the thickest and densest fibrin films, easing inflammation and profibrosis of macrophages, and finally mitigating FBR. Thus, this study deepens the understanding of the role of fibrin films in host recognition and FBR and demonstrates the feasibility of a strategy to regulate FBR by modulating fibrin films via tuning the absorption of blood proteins. AAAS 2023-09-15 /pmc/articles/PMC10503960/ /pubmed/37719049 http://dx.doi.org/10.34133/research.0225 Text en Copyright © 2023 Yang Zou et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Exclusive licensee Science and Technology Review Publishing House. No claim to original U.S. Government Works. Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CC BY 4.0) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Zou, Yang
Shan, Zhengjie
Han, Zongpu
Yang, Jieting
Lin, Yixiong
Gong, Zhuohong
Xie, Lv
Xu, Jieyun
Xie, Runlong
Chen, Zhuofan
Chen, Zetao
Regulating Blood Clot Fibrin Films to Manipulate Biomaterial-Mediated Foreign Body Responses
title Regulating Blood Clot Fibrin Films to Manipulate Biomaterial-Mediated Foreign Body Responses
title_full Regulating Blood Clot Fibrin Films to Manipulate Biomaterial-Mediated Foreign Body Responses
title_fullStr Regulating Blood Clot Fibrin Films to Manipulate Biomaterial-Mediated Foreign Body Responses
title_full_unstemmed Regulating Blood Clot Fibrin Films to Manipulate Biomaterial-Mediated Foreign Body Responses
title_short Regulating Blood Clot Fibrin Films to Manipulate Biomaterial-Mediated Foreign Body Responses
title_sort regulating blood clot fibrin films to manipulate biomaterial-mediated foreign body responses
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10503960/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37719049
http://dx.doi.org/10.34133/research.0225
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