2014 AIChE Annual Meeting
(491b) DNA Modification of Collagen Scaffolds for Applications in Regenerative Medicine
Authors
Sullivan, M. O. - Presenter, University of Delaware
Urello, M. A., University of Delaware
Kiick, K. L., University of Delaware
The use of collagen-based biomaterials in regenerative medicine has rapidly increased over the past decade due to the biocompatibility, approved clinical usage, and broad importance of collagens in mammalian tissues. During this period, a variety of collagen modification techniques have been developed for the purpose of retaining and delivering therapeutics. Many techniques rely on chemical treatments, but a biomimetic strategy to modify collagen scaffolds offers compelling advantages. We have designed a collagen mimetic peptide (CMP)-based approach to create DNA-linked collagens for applications in therapeutic gene transfer. CMPs offer an enormously versatile (and reversible) method for modification of collagen with a range of materials. We created CMPs with a range of hybridization temperatures (Tm) on collagen I, and demonstrated the functionalization of DNA polyplexes with addressable CMPs at a range of densities. The retention of DNA polyplexes on collagen could be directly manipulated through variation of the CMP density on the polyplexes, and the CMP-based retention strategy also increased polyplex stability and sustained gene transfer over a period of several weeks in cultured murine fibroblasts. This novel collagen modification approach offers new opportunities to address key issues in therapeutic gene transfer for applications in regenerative medicine.