A chlorogenic acid functional strategy of anti-inflammation, anti-coagulation and promoted endothelial proliferation for bioprosthetic artificial heart valves†
Abstract
Heart valve replacement has become an optimal choice for the treatment of severe heart valve disease. At present, most commercial bioprosthetic heart valves (BHVs) are made from porcine pericardium or bovine pericardium treated with glutaraldehyde. Nevertheless, due to the toxicity of residual aldehyde groups left after glutaraldehyde cross-linking, these commercial BHVs exhibit poor biocompatibility, calcification, risk of coagulation and endothelialization difficulty, which greatly affects the durability of the BHVs and shortens their service life. In this work, based on a chlorogenic acid functional anti-inflammation, anti-coagulation and endothelialization strategy and dual-functional non-glutaraldehyde cross-linking reagent OX-CO, a kind of functional BHV material OX-CA-PP has been developed from OX-CO cross-linked porcine pericardium (OX-CO-PP) followed by the convenient modification of chlorogenic acid through a reactive oxygen species (ROS) sensitive borate ester bond. The functionalization of chlorogenic acid can reduce the risk of valve leaf thrombosis and promote endothelial cell proliferation, which is beneficial to the formation of a long-term interface with good blood compatibility. Meanwhile, such a ROS responsive behavior can trigger intelligent release of chlorogenic acid on-demand to achieve the inhibition of acute inflammation at the early stage of implantation. The in vivo and in vitro experimental results show that the functional BHV material OX-CA-PP exhibits superior anti-inflammation, improved anti-coagulation, minimal calcification and promoted proliferation of endothelial cells, showing that this non-glutaraldehyde functional strategy has great potential for the application of BHVs and providing a promising reference for other implanted biomaterials.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Journal of Materials Chemistry B HOT Papers