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Tissue transglutaminase (TG-2) modified amniotic membrane: A novel scaffold for biomedical applications

Chau, David Y.S.; Brown, Sheridan V.; Mather, Melissa L.; Hutter, Victoria; Tint, Naing L.; Dua, Harminder S.; Rose, Felicity R.A.J.; Ghaemmaghami, Amir M.

Authors

David Y.S. Chau

Sheridan V. Brown

Melissa L. Mather

Victoria Hutter

Naing L. Tint

Harminder S. Dua



Abstract

The amniotic membrane (AM) is considered as a natural cell culture substrate and has occasionally been exploited in regenerative medicine especially for ocular surface reconstruction and dermal wound healing applications. However, its use is limited by its relatively weak mechanical strength, difficulty during manual handling and susceptibility to proteolytic degradation in vivo. Therefore, in this study we aimed to enhance the mechanical and biological characteristics of the AM by enzymatically cross-linking it using tissue transglutaminase (TG)-a calcium-dependent enzyme capable of forming stable ε(γ-glutamyl)lysine cross-linkages. Using a biological catalyst such as TG does not only prevent denaturation during sample preparation but also minimizes the potential of residual chemical cross-linking agents compared to alternative methodologies. Human AM, sourced from elective caesarean sectioning, were treated with TG, bovine serum albumin and/or a no-treatment control. Samples were then compared in terms of their physical and (scanning electron microscopy (SEM), transparency, mechanical strength, susceptibility to proteolytic degradation) biological characteristics (in vitro cell culture, activation of dendritic cells (DC)) and their in vivo biocompatibility/ angiogenic capacity (chick chorioallantoic membrane assay). TG-treated AM exhibited enhanced mechanical strength and greater resistance to proteolytic/collagenase degradation compared to the control(s). SEM imaging of the TG-treated membrane summarized a significantly closer association and greater interconnectivity of individual collagen fibres yet it had no effect on the overall transparency of the AM. In vitro cell culture demonstrated no detrimental effect of TG-treatment on the AM in terms of cell attachment, spreading, proliferation and differentiation. Moreover, an 'immune response' was not elicited based on extended in vitro culture with human-monocyte-derived DC. Interestingly, the TG-treated AM still allowed angiogenesis to occur and in some instances, demonstrated an enhancement compared to the control (n = 5). We hereby demonstrate that treating the AM with the cross-linking enzyme, TG, results in a novel biomaterial with enhanced mechanical and biological characteristics. Above all, this modified membrane demonstrates greater strength, maintains in vitro cell growth, retains optical transparency and allows angiogenesis to occur without inducing an immune response. Altogether, this study demonstrates the feasibility of TG as an alternate cross-linking treatment for the production of novel biomaterials and suggests that TG-treated AM may now be more commonly exploited as a therapeutic dressing for ocular or wound applications. © 2012 IOP Publishing Ltd.

Citation

Chau, D. Y., Brown, S. V., Mather, M. L., Hutter, V., Tint, N. L., Dua, H. S., Rose, F. R., & Ghaemmaghami, A. M. (2012). Tissue transglutaminase (TG-2) modified amniotic membrane: A novel scaffold for biomedical applications. Biomedical Materials, 7(4), Article 045011. https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-6041/7/4/045011

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 3, 2012
Online Publication Date Jun 1, 2012
Publication Date 2012-08
Deposit Date Jan 3, 2023
Journal Biomedical Materials (Bristol)
Print ISSN 1748-6041
Electronic ISSN 1748-605X
Publisher IOP Publishing
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 7
Issue 4
Article Number 045011
DOI https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-6041/7/4/045011
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3097515
Publisher URL https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-6041/7/4/045011