Litcius/Paper detail

Strategies to Control or Mimic Growth Factor Activity for Bone, Cartilage, and Osteochondral Tissue Engineering

Kelly B. Seims, Natasha K. Hunt, Lesley W. Chow

2021Bioconjugate Chemistry49 citationsDOI

Abstract

Growth factors play a critical role in tissue repair and regeneration. However, their clinical success is limited by their low stability, short half-life, and rapid diffusion from the delivery site. Supraphysiological growth factor concentrations are often required to demonstrate efficacy but can lead to adverse reactions, such as inflammatory complications and increased cancer risk. These issues have motivated the development of delivery systems that enable sustained release and controlled presentation of growth factors. This review specifically focuses on bioconjugation strategies to enhance growth factor activity for bone, cartilage, and osteochondral applications. We describe approaches to localize growth factors using noncovalent and covalent methods, bind growth factors via peptides, and mimic growth factor function with mimetic peptide sequences. We also discuss emerging and future directions to control spatiotemporal growth factor delivery to improve functional tissue repair and regeneration.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryGrowth factorRegeneration (biology)CartilageTissue engineeringRegenerative medicineCell biologyBiomedical engineeringAnatomyCellBiochemistryMedicineReceptorBiologyProteoglycans and glycosaminoglycans researchConnective tissue disorders researchOsteoarthritis Treatment and Mechanisms