PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2021

A Self-Powered Piezo-Bioelectric Device Regulates Tendon Repair-Associated Signaling Pathways through Modulation of Mechanosensitive Ion Channels

Fernandez-Yague MA, Trotier A, et al.

Advanced Materials

National University of Ireland Galway, University of the Basque Country, University of Limerick, Queen Mary University of London

RESEARCH SUMMARY
This study reports an implantable, self-powered piezo-bioelectric scaffold designed to improve tendon repair by converting physiologic mechanical loading into localized bioelectric cues. The authors fabricate aligned electrospun PVDF-TrFE fibrous scaffolds (with a chemically/topographically analogous non-piezoelectric PTFE control) and show that electromechanical stimulation (EMS) better maintains tendon-cell phenotype in vitro than mechanical stimulation alone, including sustained upregulation of tendon markers (e.g., SCX, TNMD) and differential regulation of mechanosensitive ion channels and signaling pathways (MAPK/ERK, FAK, Wnt/β-catenin, BMP). In a rat Achilles acute injury model, combining moderate treadmill running with the piezoelectric scaffold improved tendon-specific repair signatures and reduced maladaptive pathways (e.g., calcification/osteochondral drift) compared with mechanical-only controls, supporting electromechanical stimulation as a strategy to bias healing toward tendon-specific regeneration.

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

MechanoCulture T6

A CellScale MechanoCulture T6 (UniMechanoCulture T6) bioreactor was used to deliver the study’s core in vitro uniaxial cyclic strain regimen to tendon-derived cells cultured on piezoelectric (PVDF-TrFE) versus non-piezoelectric (PTFE) fibrous scaffolds. The system applied controlled static strain (4%) or dynamic tensile strain (4% at 0.5–2 Hz, 8 h/day for 1–10 days) under standard cell-culture conditions (37 °C, humidified incubator environment), enabling a clean comparison between mechanical stimulation (MS) and electromechanical stimulation (EMS) where the only major variable was the scaffold’s piezoelectric output during loading. These CellScale-driven loading experiments were essential for establishing that motion-powered electromechanical cues modulate mechanosensitive ion channels and downstream pathways to promote tendon-specific phenotype maintenance and regenerative signaling (a key mechanistic pillar of the paper).
AUTHORS

Marc A. Fernandez-Yague; Alexandre Trotier; Secil Demir; Sunny Akogwu Abbah; Aitor Larrañaga; Arun Thirumaran; Aimee Stapleton; Syed A. M. Tofail; Matteo Palma; Michelle Kilcoyne; Abhay Pandit; Manus J. Biggs.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

Advanced Materials

YEAR

2021

INSTITUTIONS

National University of Ireland Galway, University of the Basque Country, University of Limerick, Queen Mary University of London

COUNTRIES

Ireland, Spain, United Kingdom

INSTRUMENT USED

MechanoCulture T6

TESTING METHODS

Hydrated and Temperature Controlled TestingTensile Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

Electroactive and Photothermal PolymersMechanotransductionScaffold Mechanical TestingTendon Tissue Engineering & Ligament MechanicsWearable Bioelectronics

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