Publications by authors named "H Madry"

Article Synopsis
  • Despite the lack of a cure for osteoarthritis, researchers aimed to address mitochondrial dysfunction by developing a new treatment that uses mitochondria to deliver gene therapy via recombinant adeno-associated viral (rAAV) vectors.
  • The study demonstrated that this mitochondria/rAAV system could successfully increase the expression of insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) in human osteoarthritic chondrocytes, showing up to an 8.4-fold increase compared to controls.
  • The strategy not only improved cell proliferation and survival but also boosted the production of the extracellular matrix and enhanced mitochondrial function, indicating its potential as a promising treatment for osteoarthritis.
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Osteoarthritis is a progressive, irreversible debilitating whole joint disease that affects millions of people worldwide. Despite the availability of various options (non-pharmacological and pharmacological treatments and therapy, orthobiologics, and surgical interventions), none of them can definitively cure osteoarthritis in patients. Strategies based on the controlled release of therapeutic compounds via biocompatible materials may provide powerful tools to enhance the spatiotemporal delivery, expression, and activities of the candidate agents as a means to durably manage the pathological progression of osteoarthritis in the affected joints upon convenient intra-articular (injectable) delivery while reducing their clearance, dissemination, or side effects.

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Despite critical advances in regenerative medicine, the generation of definitive, reliable treatments for musculoskeletal diseases remains challenging. Gene therapy based on the delivery of therapeutic genetic sequences has strong value to offer effective, durable options to decisively manage such disorders. Furthermore, scaffold-mediated gene therapy provides powerful alternatives to overcome hurdles associated with classical gene therapy, allowing for the spatiotemporal delivery of candidate genes to sites of injury.

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Despite various clinical options, human anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) lesions do not fully heal. Biomaterial-guided gene therapy using recombinant adeno-associated virus (rAAV) vectors may improve the intrinsic mechanisms of ACL repair. Here, we examined whether poly(sodium styrene sulfonate)-grafted poly(ε-caprolactone) (pNaSS-grafted PCL) films can deliver rAAV vectors coding for the reparative basic fibroblast growth factor (FGF-2) and transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β) in human mesenchymal stromal cells (hMSCs) as a source of implantable cells in ACL lesions.

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