Heparin-functionalized polymer graft surface eluting MK2 inhibitory peptide to improve hemocompatibility and anti-neointimal activity
Journal of Controlled Release, 2017•Elsevier
The leading cause of synthetic graft failure includes thrombotic occlusion and intimal
hyperplasia at the site of vascular anastomosis. Herein, we report a co-immobilization
strategy of heparin and potent anti-neointimal drug (Mitogen Activated Protein Kinase II
inhibitory peptide; MK2i) by using a tyrosinase-catalyzed oxidative reaction for preventing
thrombotic occlusion and neointimal formation of synthetic vascular grafts. The binding of
heparin–tyramine polymer (HT) onto the polycarprolactone (PCL) surface enhanced blood …
hyperplasia at the site of vascular anastomosis. Herein, we report a co-immobilization
strategy of heparin and potent anti-neointimal drug (Mitogen Activated Protein Kinase II
inhibitory peptide; MK2i) by using a tyrosinase-catalyzed oxidative reaction for preventing
thrombotic occlusion and neointimal formation of synthetic vascular grafts. The binding of
heparin–tyramine polymer (HT) onto the polycarprolactone (PCL) surface enhanced blood …
Abstract
The leading cause of synthetic graft failure includes thrombotic occlusion and intimal hyperplasia at the site of vascular anastomosis. Herein, we report a co-immobilization strategy of heparin and potent anti-neointimal drug (Mitogen Activated Protein Kinase II inhibitory peptide; MK2i) by using a tyrosinase-catalyzed oxidative reaction for preventing thrombotic occlusion and neointimal formation of synthetic vascular grafts. The binding of heparin–tyramine polymer (HT) onto the polycarprolactone (PCL) surface enhanced blood compatibility with significantly reduced protein absorption (64.7% decrease) and platelet adhesion (85.6% decrease) compared to bare PCL surface. When loading MK2i, 1) the HT depot surface gained high MK2i-loading efficiency through charge-charge interaction, and 2) this depot platform enabled long-term, controlled release over 4 weeks (92–272 μg/mL of MK2i). The released MK2i showed significant inhibitory effects on VSMC migration through down-regulated phosphorylation of target proteins (HSP27 and CREB) associated with intimal hyperplasia. In addition, it was found that the released MK2i infiltrated into the tissue with a cumulative manner in ex vivo human saphenous vein (HSV) model. This present study demonstrates that enzymatically HT-coated surface modification is an effective strategy to induce long-term MK2i release as well as hemocompatibility, thereby improving anti-neointimal activity of synthetic vascular grafts.
Elsevier