PEDOT‐Integrated Fish Swim Bladders as Conductive Nerve Conduits
Advanced artificial nerve conduits offer a promising alternative for nerve injury repair. Current research focuses on improving the therapeutic effectiveness of nerve conduits by optimizing scaffold materials and functional components. In this study, a novel poly(3,4‐ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT)‐...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Advanced Science 2024-08, Vol.11 (31), p.e2400827-n/a |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Advanced artificial nerve conduits offer a promising alternative for nerve injury repair. Current research focuses on improving the therapeutic effectiveness of nerve conduits by optimizing scaffold materials and functional components. In this study, a novel poly(3,4‐ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT)‐integrated fish swim bladder (FSB) is presented as a conductive nerve conduit with ordered topology and electrical stimulation to promote nerve regeneration. PEDOT nanomaterials and adhesive peptides (IKVAV) are successfully incorporated onto the decellularized FSB substrate through pre‐coating with polydopamine. The obtained PEDOT/IKVAV‐integrated FSB substrate exhibits outstanding mechanical properties, high electrical conductivity, stability, as well as excellent biocompatibility and bioadhesive properties. In vitro studies confirm that the PEDOT/IKVAV‐integrated FSB can effectively facilitate the growth and directional extension of pheochromocytoma 12 cells and dorsal root ganglion neurites. In addition, in vivo experiments demonstrate that the proposed PEDOT/IKVAV‐integrated FSB conduit can accelerate defective nerve repair and functional restoration. The findings indicate that the FSB‐derived conductive nerve conduits with multiple regenerative inducing signals integration provide a conducive milieu for nerve regeneration, exhibiting great potential for repairing long‐segment neural defects.
A type of PEDOT‐integrated fish swim bladder is proposed as a conductive nerve conduit with anisotropic surface topography, electrical conductivity, flexibility, and biological cues for peripheral nerve regeneration. PEDOT nanoparticles and IKVAV peptides are immobilized on the fish swim bladders, thus promoting the growth and directional extension of neural cells, together with accelerating regeneration and functional recovery of damaged nerves. |
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ISSN: | 2198-3844 2198-3844 |
DOI: | 10.1002/advs.202400827 |