Modulation of Scar Tissue Formation in Injured Nervous Tissue Cultivated on Surface-Engineered Coralline Scaffolds

Orly Eva Weiss orly1990@hotmail.com 1 Roni Mina Hendler 1 Eyal Aviv Canji 1 Tzachy Yitzchak Morad 1 Francis Yitshak 2 Zvy Dubinsky 3 Maytal Foox 5 Ido Merfeld 1,4 Liat Hammer 1,4 Danny Baranes 1
1Molecular Biology, Ariel University, Ariel, Israel
2., Ariel Scientific Innovations, Ariel, Israel
3The Mina and Everard Goodman Faculty of Life Sciences, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel
4R&D, Qrons Inc., Miami, Florida, USA
5., Maytal, ., Israel

Following traumatic brain injury, there is no restoration of the lost nervous tissue, mainly due to the formation of a scar. One promising strategy to overcome this hurdle is grafting scaffolds that can disturb the scar blockade, enabling cell invasion into the wound. The aragonite skeleton of corals are useful scaffolds for testing this strategy, being supportive for neural cells in culture. The purpose of this work was to check if a contact between a coralline scaffold and an injured nervous tissue affects scar formation and if this effect can be regulated by engineering the scaffold’s surface topology. To address that, hippocampal slices were cultivated on a coral skeleton having two distinct surface shapes: 1. Intact skeleton pieces (ISP): porous, micro-rough surface; 2. Grained skeleton (GS): non-porous, macro-rough surface. On ISP, slices deformed by engulfing the scaffold’s outer surface without penetrating the pores, yet, they preserved their coherence. By contrast, on GS slices were flat, but broken into interconnected small segments of tissue. In addition, whereas on ISP astrocytes were significantly more active and diffusely distributed, on GS reactive astrocytes tightened into a single <90µm wide scar-like stripe at the slice’s periphery. Hence, by grafting coralline scaffolds of pre-designed surface roughness and porosity into brain wounds, control over scar tissue formation can be gained, providing an opportunity for cell migration and damage repair.









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