| Biomaterials are crucial  to the development of many modern medical devices and products including biodegradable  sutures, bone screws, pins, rods and plates, and scaffolds for regenerating  bone, cartilage and blood vessels; and with each new discovery comes a chance  to solve yet-unmet clinical challenges. As new, innovative research drives the  evolution of biomaterials toward increasingly sophisticated applications, the  functional requirements of those materials have expanded to include both  therapeutic and diagnostic elements – with particular focus on optical imaging  capabilities, where Penn State University's Huck Institutes faculty  researcher Jian Yang and his Transformative Biomaterials and  Biotechnology Lab have recently made several revolutionary innovations. "My lab focuses on developing materials that can be used for 3-D printing and  regenerative engineering" said Yang. Polylactones – such as polylactic acid  (PLA)-are one of the few types of biodegradable polymers that have been widely  used in FDA approved medical devices such as orthopedic fixation devices,  tissue engineering scaffolds and drug-delivering micro- or nano-particles. We  are innovating this material by making it intrinsically photoluminescent  without adding traditional photobleaching organic dyes or cytotoxic quantum  dots. That was a challenge previously, but we've managed to do it now.By  modifying the PLA polymer to be intrinsically fluorescent, the Yang Lab has  made a biodegradable material that can also be useful in bioimaging, diagnosis,  sensing and other related applications.
 
 Cancer Management:
 In one of their research projects, the Yang Lab makes the PLA polymer into  nanoparticles that can carry chemotherapeutic drugs to target cancerous tumors.  “Because the cell membranes of cancer cells overexpress folate receptors,” Yang  explained, "We can target those cells and tumors with our nanoparticle by  conjugating folic acid on its surface; and now that our nanoparticle is  fluorescent, we can also use it to image the tumors via fluorescence  imaging." Yang adds that during surgery, however, a doctor can only see down to  roughly millimeter-sized tumors with the naked eye, and so another problem  arises: there are other cancerous cells surrounding the tumors that the doctor  cannot see, and if those cells aren't also removed, then the cancer will  return. We needed a better way to detect smaller-sized tumor cells and  cell clusters, and since fluorescence imaging is a  very sensitive tool, it can be used to detect those cells that cannot be seen  with the naked eye. Our nanoparticles can target the tumor cells, and then we  can use fluorescence imaging to illuminate those cells for surgical removal. We've  also used the fluorescent PLA polymer to create what we call 'dual-imaging'  nanoparticles for cancer treatment" he continued, "meaning that we can  encapsulate both cancer drugs and magnetic nanoparticles in our fluorescent PLA  nanoparticles in order to use them for both magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)  and fluorescence imaging. MRI has become a very popular tool in cancer  treatment since it can be used to look deep into the body and rapidly locate  solid tumors; then the fluorescence imaging enables doctors to identify small  cancer cell clusters around the tumor areas."
 Because these nanoparticles have two functions, for both therapeutic drug  delivery and diagnostic imaging, they are known as theranostics – a  portmanteau word combining therapeutic and diagnostic – but Yang's fluorescent  PLA polymer isn't just limited to these roles, either.
 
 Regenerative Engineering:
 This fluorescent PLA material can also be used for regenerative engineering. Yang  notes that biodegradable polymers are often used to make temporary scaffolds  for tissue regeneration, where the scaffolds are placed in the body to recruit  cells – sometimes pre-seeded with cells before implantation – and will then  degrade and eventually be absorbed by the body; so for different applications,  Yang explains, he wants to design materials with different specific degradation  rates. “For example" he said, "in bone regeneration, we may want the material  to degrade over six months or a year; but in wound healing, we may want the  material to degrade over a couple of months. So the question, according to  Yang, is first how to determine materials degradation rates, and then how to  design materials that can match the need for specific degradation rates in  vivo. When we design a material to degrade over a specific period of  time," he explained, " We test it in the lab with an incubator and  buffer solution set at 37ºC and 7.4 pH to simulate normal conditions inside the  body; this allows us to rapidly assess the rate of degradation in vitro, but in  vivo situations are very different and so this poses a challenge."
 Many factors in the body, such as enzymes and other biomolecules, influence  materials' degradation rates, and so, Yang stated, our in vitro understanding  cannot be translated directly in vivo; we need to do in situ monitoring to  assess how materials actually degrade in vivo. Now that they have made a  material that is intrinsically fluorescent, the Yang Lab can do non-invasive  imaging for real-time in situ monitoring of the material's degradation: as the  fluorescent signal becomes weaker over time and eventually disappears, its  decay can be translated into the rate of the material's degradation without  ever needing to re-open the body. Still – in many cases, even when the body is  re-opened, it can be difficult to measure a material's degradation. If we are  making a material to be porous, Yang explained, then the body's tissues grow  through the material and it becomes impossible to differentiate the native  tissues from the material.
 But, Yang said, when those tissues grow into the fluorescent biomaterial, their  interaction may change the fluorescent signal, and so it may be possible to  correlate that signal change with the tissues' growth into the material."In  other words, he concludes, we may also have a way to measure tissue  regeneration in addition to measuring material degradation, and therefore we  can better design our materials to meet specific medical needs."
 This work is  published in Advanced Materials.
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