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miR-22 eluting cardiovascular stent based on a self-healable spongy coating inhibits in-stent restenosis

Jing Wang, Honglin Qian, Shengyu Chen, Wei‐Pin Huang, Danni Huang, Hongye Hao, Ke‐feng Ren, Yunbing Wang, Guosheng Fu, Jian Ji

2021Bioactive Materials41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The in-stent restenosis (IRS) after the percutaneous coronary intervention contributes to the major treatment failure of stent implantation. MicroRNAs have been revealed as powerful gene medicine to regulate endothelial cells (EC) and smooth muscle cells (SMC) in response to vascular injury , providing a promising therapeutic candidate to inhibit IRS. However, the controllable loading and eluting of hydrophilic bioactive microRNAs pose a challenge to current lipophilic stent coatings. Here, we developed a microRNA eluting cardiovascular stent via the self-healing encapsulation process based on an amphipathic poly(ε-caprolactone)-poly(ethylene glycol)-poly(ε-caprolactone) (PCL-PEG-PCL, PCEC) triblock copolymer spongy network. The miR-22 was used as a model microRNA to regulate SMC. The dynamic porous coating realized the uniform and controllable loading of miR-22, reaching the highest dosage of 133 pmol cm −2 . We demonstrated that the sustained release of miR-22 dramatically enhanced the contractile phenotype of SMC without interfering with the proliferation of EC, thus leading to the EC dominating growth at an EC/SMC ratio of 5.4. More importantly, the PCEC@miR-22 coated stents showed reduced inflammation, low switching of SMC phenotype, and low secretion of extracellular matrix, which significantly inhibited IRS. This work provides a simple and robust coating platform for the delivery of microRNAs on cardiovascular stent, which may extend to other combination medical devices, and facilitate practical application of bioactive agents in clinics.

Topics & Concepts

RestenosisStentMaterials sciencemicroRNAEthylene glycolExtracellular matrixCoatingBiomedical engineeringCancer researchCell biologyChemistryNanotechnologyMedicineSurgeryBiologyBiochemistryGeneOrganic chemistryElectrospun Nanofibers in Biomedical ApplicationsCoronary Interventions and DiagnosticsMicroRNA in disease regulation