The invention relates to a polymer-based material with covalently bonded, enzymatically degradable peptide sequences. The invention further relates to the use of such a polymer-based material for in-vitro production of cell cultures or tissues or organs, for in-vivo stabilization of donated cells, tissues or organs as well as for in-vivo or in-vitro treatment of living cells, tissues and organs. In this case, an adhesive bond between the material on the one hand and the sample on the other hand, meaning cells, tissues or organs, is controlledly degradable, without destroying the integrity of the sample (extracellular matrix as well as cell-cell and extracellular matrix-cell contacts) (bio-orthogonality).
A number of techniques exist for the formation of cell-compatible materials and for their individual functionalization with a variety of biologically active molecules, such as covalently bonded cell-adhesive peptides, proteins, and sometimes growth factors and cytokines. Compared to these methods, synthetic methods for introducing selective material decomposition reactions are essentially unexplored. The enzymatic methods of cell detachment/dissociation used hitherto, such as methods using trypsin, pepsin or collagenases, are not applicable to either newly generated or donated tissues and organs, as these nonselective methods damage the order of their extracellular matrix. In addition, the use of such enzymes for releasing cells in three-dimensional materials is severely limited because it requires a higher enzyme concentration or longer treatment times, which can lead to undesired cleavage of the cell surface proteins. More selective matrix metalloproteases (MMPs) which cleave certain amino acid sequences have been shown to be applicable for a gentle cell collection in three-dimensional hydrogel materials. The most commonly used MMPs have shown little effect on cell behavior. However, the use of MMPs for tissue or organ applications is generally limited, as they cause cleavage of collagen family proteins in the extracellular matrix (ECM), which can result in the loss of important structural units of the tissues and organs. In summary, the current state of the art provides practical techniques for cell retrieval in both two- and three-dimensional applications, whereas, to date, there are no suitable biotechnological methods available for the gentle recovery of complex cell entities, such as tissues and organs, from carrier materials.
In addition to classical enzymatic methods, some future techniques for cell-removal based on influencing the physicochemical properties of the materials are promising. For example, some progress has been made in the development of thermo-responsive bio-hybrid materials that induce mechanical stress in response to temperature changes. Such stress, for example swelling of a hydrogel structure, induces detachment (delamination) of adherent cells, and has therefore been used for the preparation of single-layer cell layers, known as cell-sheet engineering. Nevertheless, this method requires balancing cell adhesion and induced detachment and producing user-defined carrier properties in order to be useful for various cell types. Without such time- and resource-intensive generation/adaptation, the material-induced stress can damage the cellular ECM attached to the materials, thereby limiting the reproducibility of such processes.
Moreover, this prior art is limited to simple two-dimensional applications and the suitability of the temperature-sensitive carriers for multilayer or more complex tissues is questionable. Such a limitation of the applicability becomes more severe when organs are transported or treated: Thermoresponsive carriers can then no longer be used, since they do not provide sufficiently strong adhesion (the polymer layers are only a few hundred nanometers thick). Another disadvantage of the thermoresponsive carriers is the temperature change required for delamination: there are cells that are very sensitive and do not survive long-term temperature changes/temperature drops without damage.
More recently, the growing interest in orthogonal methods in materials chemistry has led to the generation of hydrogels which can be orthogonally cleaved by light and cells. The use of two-photon techniques enables the use of such methods for light-controlled cell migration/cleavage from hydrogel frameworks. With some adjustments, such systems could be used for cell harvesting; however, the current limitation to two-photon devices and the low blocompatibility of the corresponding photon reactions limit this promising technique to single cell applications.
In summary, the most advanced physical chemistry methods currently available for influencing materials do not have the necessary instrumentation for the gentle cell cleavage of complex cell assemblies, such as tissues and organs, from carrier materials.
The development of compatible materials for de-novo tissue generation, tissue engineering, or for stabilizing donated tissues or organ implants is a general approach in the fields of regenerative medicine and implant research. Advances in these areas of research have led to today's understanding of the importance of self-regeneration methods in which ex-vivo tissues or organs can be regenerated from a small number of original cells. These methods introduce in the material development for tissue and organ implant fabrication several new problems—some of them self-exclusion problems. On the one hand, cell cultures require stable biofunctionalized surfaces or scaffolds which are similar to the three-dimensional extracellular matrix and which can be degraded for the expansion of the cells and the subsequent tissue production by the cell. Strong cell-adhesive properties of such materials are an important feature for a successful cell or tissue development. On the other hand, for a successful implantation, the formed tissue should be gently separated from the carrier material in order to maintain its cellular and extracellular matrix structure untouched. In other words, the adhesion between tissue and material should be reduced without destroying the extracellular matrix as well as the cell-cell and extracellular matrix-cell bonds within the tissue. However, since these bonds are of the identical or similar chemical nature, their selective cleavage requires novel, non-trivial bio-orthogonal methods for the selective degradation of the adhesive bond between material and tissue.
It is therefore the object of the invention to provide a material in which an adhesive bond between the material and cells, tissues or organs can be controlledly and selectively degraded, without destroying the bond between the cells and the extracellular matrix within the tissue.
The object of the invention is attained with a polymer-based material having covalently bonded, enzymatically degradable peptide sequences according to claim 1. The degradable, preferably cleavable peptide sequences are hereby inert to the general biological and metabolic activity of cells and tissues, meaning they cannot be degraded by the biological and metabolic activity of cells and tissues. The peptide sequences are each composed of two to fifteen amino acids and can be incorporated into the polymer-based material or conjugated to the polymer-based material. Thus, the peptide sequence may be part of either a three-dimensional or a two-dimensional structure of the polymer-based material. Either a bio-orthogonal degradation of the three-dimensional structure occurs through an enzyme-addition-controlled degradation of a covalent bond of the peptide sequence, or at least a portion of the molecule is released when the peptide sequence is conjugated with the polymer-based material.
Preferably, the number of amino acid residues per peptide molecule is from 5 to 10. The polymer-based material may form a two or three-dimensional networked structure with nodes and edges, wherein at least a portion of the nodes and/or edges have the linking molecules. The polymer-based material may be, for example, a hydrogel or a preferably solid, condensed polymer. According to an advantageous embodiment of the invention, the polymer-based material may be a polymer coating of a carrier substrate (for example glass).
According to a particularly preferred embodiment of the invention, the polymer-based material includes at least a preferably bioactive component which is releasable by a degradation of the covalent bond of the peptide sequence controlled by enzyme addition. This component belongs to a group of components consisting of active ingredients, nucleic acids, for example DNA, RNA or aptamers, proteins, peptide conjugates, sulfated and non-sulfated polysaccharides and their conjugates. The protein or peptide conjugate may advantageously be a cytokine, a chemokine, a growth factor, a hormone, an antibody or a component of the extracellular matrix.
According to one modified embodiment, the molecules of the at least one releasable component are conjugated to the polymer-based material by linkers which each contain the enzymatically degradable peptide sequence.
Alternatively, the molecules of the at least one releasable component may be physically enclosed in and physically bonded to a three-dimensional polymer network. The components would then be released by a bio-orthogonal degradation of the enclosing polymer network.
According to the invention, the peptide sequences are enzymatically degradable by having a site that is enzymatically cleavable by proteases. The release of active ingredients, nucleic acids, proteins, peptide conjugates or polysaccharides can then be controlled via the addition of protease.
In accordance with the invention, the cleavable peptide sequence thereby has a cleavable site selected from a group of cleavage sites consisting of a site cleavable by tobacco-etch-virus-protease, a site cleavable by human rhinovirus 3C protease, a site cleavable by factor Xa protease, a site cleavable by thrombin protease, a site cleavable by enterokinase, a site cleavable by sortase-A-protease, a site cleavable by caspase-3 protease, a site cleavable by granzyme B serine protease as well as a site cleavable by PreScission™. PreScission™ is a fusion protein composed of glutathione S-transferase (GST) and human rhinovirus (HRV)-type 14-3C protease.
Advantageously, these peptide sequences are selected as enzymatically degradable peptide sequences that cannot de degraded by the biological and metabolic activity of cells and tissues. The peptide sequence is preferably selected from a group consisting of ENLYFQ/X, ETVLFQ/GP, EVLFQ/GP, IEGR/IEGRX, DDDDK/, LVPRGS/FXRS, DXXD/, LPET/G, wherein the forward slash (I) indicates the respective cleavable site, and the letters represent the single-letter code of the proteinogenic amino acids, and X represents any naturally occurring amino acid.
According to another embodiment of the invention, the polymer-based material further includes peptide sequences which are degradable by the biological and metabolic activity of cells and tissues, and which are incorporated into the polymer-based material or conjugated to the polymer-based material, such that the peptide sequence is part of either a two-dimensional or three-dimensional structure of the polymer-based material. The biological and metabolic activity of cells and tissues results in bio-orthogonal degradation of the three-dimensional structure, or in the case of conjugation of the peptide sequence to the polymer-based material, cause the release of at least a portion of the molecule. These peptide sequences are preferably linked to the peptide sequences which are not degradable by the biological and metabolic activity of cells and tissues. A controlled addition of an enzyme, i.e. an addition of the enzyme as needed, causes an acceleration of the degradation of the material or an accelerated release of components.
The present invention can be used with methods for on-demand, i.e. time-controlled, cleavage of a covalent bond in polymer-based materials, wherein these methods can be performed in the presence of living cells, tissues, or organs in-vitro or in-vivo in a bio-orthogonal manner. These applications/methods are based on the incorporation of the short enzymatic degradable/cleavable peptide sequences into common polymer-based material structures as molecular linkers. The enzymatically controlled degradation of the covalent bond leads to material degradation when the degradable covalent bond is located within the material structure. The enzymatically controlled degradation of the covalent bond causes molecules to be released when the degradable bond is in each case part of molecules that are conjugated to the material. The bonds of the material which can be degraded by the enzymatic reaction enable an orthogonal application of the enzymatic reaction in the presence of living matter, such as cells, tissues or organs, and/or in the presence of molecules of the extracellular matrix.
The polymer-based material provided with the degradable peptide sequence can be used for a controlled in-vivo or in-vitro release of an active ingredient or another one of the releasable bloactive components mentioned above, wherein the release takes place through a controlled degradation of the covalent bond of the peptide sequence by means of enzyme addition. Such application may take place particularly in the context of in-vivo or in-vitro treatment of cells, tissues and organs, wherein, if necessary, an active ingredient and/or another of the aforementioned releasable bioactive components are controlledly released by enzyme addition.
In addition, the inventive polymer-based material is suitable for an in-vitro cell culture and/or in-vitro production of tissue or organs. The enzymatic cleavage of the material does not affect the extracellular matrix or the cell-cell and extracellular matrix-cell contacts. Thus, it enables nondestructive separation of a living sample, i.e., a cell, a cell layer of a tissue or organ and its extracellular matrix, from the carrier material by degrading material as needed at any time of the development of the living sample.
The polymer-based material provided with the degradable peptide sequence may also be used for in-vitro stabilization of donated cells as well as donated tissues or organs. Also in this case, the enzymatic cleavage of the material does not affect the extracellular matrix or cell-cell and extracellular matrix-cell contacts. The controlled enzymatic cleavage of the peptide sequences allows a gentle/non-destructive separation of the cells/tissue/organ from the support material for successful implantation.
In summary, the application of the described enzymatic degradation as a bio-orthogonal method for material degradation opens up completely new perspectives for the biomaterial applications of living cells, tissues, and organs in-vitro or in-vivo.
Further details, features and advantages of embodiments of the invention will become apparent from the following description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the accompanying drawings, which show in:
The present invention relates to a method for on-demand, i.e., time-controlled, cleavage of the covalent bond in polymer-based materials which is performed bio-orthogonally in the presence of living cells, tissues, or organs in-vitro or in-vivo, as schematically illustrated in
The diagram I of
A is here an enzymatically cleavable peptide sequence which can be cleaved by a controlled enzyme addition. Preferably, these enzymes are proteases, as listed in Table 1. As also shown in Table 1, cleavable peptide sequences, which can be cleaved by the corresponding proteases at the cleavage sites (/), are each assigned to the respective proteases.
The listed peptides are examples of peptides that are inert to the general biological and metabolic activity of the living tissue, but can undergo selective enzymatic cleavage by specific enzymes. The enzymes listed in Table 1 can cleave the amino acid sequences with a very high selectivity, but are exclusively inactive against the digestion of both cellular and extracellular matrix proteins.
The letter B in the structures of
The letter C in the structures of
The diagram II of
The right side of diagram II in
The enzymatically cleavable peptides A used according to the invention are inert to the general biological and metabolic activity of the living tissue, but can be subjected to enzymatic cleavage by specific enzymes as shown in Table 1. The enzymatic cleavage of the material does not affect the extracellular matrix or the cell-cell and extracellular matrix-cell contacts. Thus, it enables separation of the living sample and its extracellular matrix from the material carrier by degradation of material as needed at any point in the development of the living sample. Also described below are various synthetic routes for the incorporation of a cleavable peptide sequence into common soft and condensed polymer-based materials that enable such incorporation in most materials for biological applications.
As shown in
As shown in the lower diagram II of
The example I in
Example II of
In Example III of
In Example IV of
The diagram I of
The diagram II in
The method of bio-orthogonal material degradation can also be used for the production of single layers of cells and tissues and grafts or in three-dimensional applications (
This invention provides a new tool for researchers or medical personnel in the collection, storage and culturing of live cells, tissues, organs that are not available with other methods.
In the following, further exemplary embodiments will be described in detail:
A synthesis of PEG-(FXa)4-conjugates was performed, as shown schematically in
427 mg of PEG-maleimide were briefly dissolved in 10 ml of 50% (v/v) acetonitrile/water and mixed with 300 mg of the FXa peptide (30% excess), which was dissolved in 15 ml of 50% (v/v) acetonitrile/water. The pH of the reaction mixture was adjusted with 1 M NaOH to pH 7.5-8. The reaction was carried out for 5 hours under a nitrogen atmosphere and the completion of the reaction was monitored by analytical HPLC. The reaction mixture was purified by preparative HPLC. The product was collected from the HPLC and freeze-dried for more than 24 hours. The formed white powder was then stored at −20° C. The synthesis scheme and the HPLC monitoring of the reaction are illustrated in
Hydrogel Formation:
The schematic diagram of the hydrogel formation and the mechanical properties as a function of the hydrogel crosslinking degree are shown in
Formation of HCEC Layers During Hydrogel Degradation:
The immortalized human corneal endothelial cells of the (HCEC)-line HCEC-B4G12, as described in the published document Valtink M. et al. Two clonal cell lines of immortalized human corneal endothellal cells show either differentiated or precursor cell characteristics. Cells. Tissues. Organs 187, 286-94 (2008), was cultured in human endothelial SFM (SFM=serum-free corneal organ culture medium) supplemented with 10 ng/ml human recombinant basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF). HCEC were seeded onto the FXa degradable hydrogels at a density of 1×105 cells per cm2. The cells were kept at 37° C. in a humidified atmosphere containing 5% CO2. The medium was changed three times a week. The hydrogel formation and the mechanical properties as a function of the hydrogel degree of crosslinking are shown in
After seven days of culturing on the FXa-degradable hydrogels, the samples were incubated in human endothelial SFM w/ 900 nM factor Xa endoprotease for 45 min at 37° C. After this time, the cellular monolayers were completely released and could be carefully handled with a 20 gauge cannula (HSW Fine Ject, Tuttlingen, Germany). The light micrographs of the HCEC layer formation during the hydrogel degradation are shown in the supplementary
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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16163667.5 | Apr 2016 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/DE2017/100260 | 4/4/2017 | WO | 00 |