We have developed plasmonic fibrin-based hydrogels that incorporate gold nanoparticles which transduce incident near-infrared (NIR) light into heat. Human adenovirus serotype type-5 vectors encoding a firefly luciferase (fLuc) coding sequence driven by a heat-inducible promoter were incorporated into the hydrogels. Transmission electronic microscopic analysis revealed that the adenoviral vectors were associated to the fibrin fibers. In vitro experiments in which human cells were cultured with plasmonic hydrogels showed that the adenoviral vectors can diffuse from the hydrogels, transduce the cells, and stimulate heat-induced transgene expression upon NIR irradiation. The hydrogels were implanted in 4.2 mm drill hole defects generated in the humerus of male rabbits. Three days after implantation, the defects were NIR-irradiated. Six h later, the animals were euthanized and samples from the bone defect zone were processed for immunohistochemical analyses using a specific fLuc antibody. The results showed strong expression of fLuc in tissues surrounding the implants of NIR-irradiated rabbits, while non- irradiated animals exhibited negligible expression. We next aimed to use the temperature increase to induce the production of transgenic bone morphogenetic protein 6 (BMP-6), using safe gene switches that can provide tighter control of in vivo transgene expression than heat-inducible promoters. These switches are only activated by heat in the presence of rapamycin and maintain a high level of targeted transgene expression for several days after heat activation. Adenoviral vectors encoding the safe switches that control the expression of BMP-6 were incorporated to the composites. The resulting NIR-responsive hydrogels were implanted in the bone defects generated in rabbits and used as a platform to transduce host cells, generate local hyperthermia and stimulate BMP-6 production.
Bone-regenerative and biocompatible materials are indicated for the regeneration of bone lost in periodontology and maxillofacial surgery. Bio-Oss is a natural bone mineral for bone grafting of bovine origin and the most common used in this kind of interventions1. Sil-Oss is a new synthetic nanostructured monetite-based material that is reabsorbed at the same time that is replaced by new bone tissue 2. Bacterial infection is one of the complications related to this kind of material.
Bacterial adherence decreased significantly on Sil-Oss compared to Bio-Oss. Sil-Oss nanostructured monetite-based biomaterial could be considered as a promising biomaterial to be used for the regeneration of bone defects since the bacterial adherence on it is lower than on another currently used material.