Abstract

Control over of biological processes can potentially be therapeutically regulated through localized biomolecular deliveries. While implantable hydrogels can provide localized therapeutic deliveries, they do not traditionally provide the temporally complex therapeutic delivery profiles required to regulate complex biological processes. Ionically crosslinked alginate hydrogels have been shown to release encapsulated payloads in response to a remotely applied ultrasonic stimulus, thus potentially enabling more temporally complex therapeutic delivery profiles. However, thorough characterizations of how different types of therapeutic payloads are retained and ultrasonically released need to be performed. Additionally, the impact of potentially disruptive ultrasonic stimulations on hydrogel structure and temperature need to be characterized to better understand what range of ultrasonic signals can be used to trigger release. To perform these characterizations, calcium-crosslinked alginate hydrogels were loaded with various model macromolecules (dextrans), chemotherapeutics, and protein signaling factors and exposed to a variety of single-pulse and multi-pulse ultrasonic signals at various amplitudes and durations. In response to single-pulsed ultrasonic exposures, quantifications of molecular release, degree of gel erosion, and increase in hydrogel temperature revealed that the ultrasonic stimulations required for statistically significant therapeutic deliveries often eroded and heated the gels to unacceptable levels. However, multi-pulse ultrasonic exposures were shown to achieve significant amounts of therapeutic release while keeping gel erosion and temperature increase at modest levels. Finally, experiments were performed demonstrating that ultrasonic stimulation could be used to generate drug release profiles shown to have potential therapeutic benefits (e.g., pulsatile and sequential anticancer delivery profiles). This work underscores the potential of using ultrasonically responsive polymeric hydrogels for providing on-demand control over more complex therapeutic deliver profiles and enhancing drug delivery strategies in cancer therapies and beyond.

Highlights

  • Biological systems conduct themselves with high degrees of spatial and temporal complexity.Many of the biological processes that underlie injury and disease constantly change in space and time and must be regulated with spatiotemporal precision for proper therapeutic outcome

  • We aimed to demonstrate that ultrasonic stimulation could be used to generate pulsatile chemotherapeutic delivery profiles by periodically turning on and off the ultrasonic signal

  • The studies presented here revealed that the ultrasonic exposures needed to generate statistically significant therapeutic deliveries from calcium-crosslinked hydrogels generated unacceptably high levels of gel heating and erosion

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Summary

Introduction

Biological systems conduct themselves with high degrees of spatial and temporal complexity.Many of the biological processes that underlie injury and disease constantly change in space and time and must be regulated with spatiotemporal precision for proper therapeutic outcome. Regeneration of tissues requires the generation of vascular networks This involves initializing angiogenic sprouting from nearby existing vasculature (through the establishment of pro-angiogenic signaling factor gradients emanating away from the regeneration site). Regenerating tissues demands the establishment of tissue-specific cells types, requiring recruitment of progenitor cells to the injury site (through the establishment of recruitment factor gradients emanating away from the injury site). These recruited progenitors must be directed to proliferate and differentiate (through localized presentations of proliferation and differentiation signaling factors) [3,6,7,8,9]. Many emerging tumor treatment strategies involve more temporally dynamic, pulsatile therapeutic delivery schedules [11,12,13] and even sequences of multiple anticancer therapeutics [14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21]

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