Postoperative abdominal adhesions are the leading cause of bowel obstruction and a cause of chronic pain and infertility. Adhesion formation occurs after 50 to 90% of abdominal operations and has no proven preventative or treatment strategy. Abdominal adhesions derive primarily from the visceral peritoneum and are composed of polyclonally proliferating tissue-resident fibroblasts. We have previously shown that signaling of the transcription factor JUN regulates adhesiogenesis and that a small-molecule JUN inhibitor (T-5224) decreases adhesion formation. Here, we encapsulated T-5224 in a shear-thinning hydrogel with antiadhesion properties for intraperitoneal postoperative delivery and sustained release of a JUN inhibitor for adhesion prevention. The material properties of the T-5224-hydrogel support its use for open or minimally invasive surgical application. We found this therapeutic system to be safe, well tolerated, and efficacious in murine and porcine preclinical models. T-5224-hydrogel minimized adhesion quantity and also diminished adhesion fibrosis at an ultrastructural level. Moving toward clinical translation, we developed a large mammal adhesion model in pigs with bowel resection. Single-cell transcriptomic analysis showed that and associated pathway signaling were diminished in adhesion-derived fibroblasts treated with T-5224-hydrogel. The JUN-inhibiting T-5224-hydrogel provided robust prevention of adhesion without deleterious effects on bowel anastomosis or abdominal wall healing. Adhesion biology is similar across surgical sites, and, therefore, this formulation has potential for applicability across the body. The development of therapeutics to prevent adhesions is of paramount importance with potential for high-impact translation to patient care to address a common, unmet clinical need.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/scitranslmed.adp9957DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

preclinical models
8
abdominal adhesions
8
adhesion
8
adhesion formation
8
jun inhibitor
8
postoperative adhesions
4
adhesions abrogated
4
abrogated sustained-release
4
sustained-release anti-jun
4
anti-jun therapeutic
4

Similar Publications

Postoperative adhesions are abrogated by a sustained-release anti-JUN therapeutic in preclinical models.

Sci Transl Med

March 2025

Hagey Laboratory for Pediatric Regenerative Medicine, Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.

Postoperative abdominal adhesions are the leading cause of bowel obstruction and a cause of chronic pain and infertility. Adhesion formation occurs after 50 to 90% of abdominal operations and has no proven preventative or treatment strategy. Abdominal adhesions derive primarily from the visceral peritoneum and are composed of polyclonally proliferating tissue-resident fibroblasts.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Interstitial lung disease (ILD) consists of a group of immune-mediated disorders that can cause inflammation and progressive fibrosis of the lungs, representing an area of unmet medical need given the lack of disease-modifying therapies and toxicities associated with current treatment options. Tissue-specific splice variants (SVs) of human aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (aaRSs) are catalytic nulls thought to confer regulatory functions. One example from human histidyl-tRNA synthetase (HARS), termed HARS because the splicing event resulted in a protein encompassing the WHEP-TRS domain of HARS (a structurally conserved domain found in multiple aaRSs), is enriched in human lung and up-regulated by inflammatory cytokines in lung and immune cells.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

While therapeutic vaccines are a promising strategy for inducing human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) control, HIV vaccines tested to date have offered limited benefit to people living with HIV. The barriers to success may include the use of vaccine platforms and/or immunogens that drive weak or suboptimal immune responses, immune escape and/or immune dysfunction associated with chronic infection despite effective antiretroviral therapy. Combining vaccines with immune modulators in a safe manner may address some of the challenges and thus increase the efficacy of therapeutic HIV vaccines.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic autoimmune disease characterized by synovial inflammation, pannus formation, and progressive joint destruction. The inflammatory milieu in RA drives endothelial cell activation and upregulation of adhesion molecules, thus facilitating leukocyte infiltration into the synovium. Reelin, a circulating glycoprotein previously implicated in endothelial activation and leukocyte recruitment in diseases such as atherosclerosis and multiple sclerosis, has emerged as a potential upstream regulator of these processes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Neoantigen vaccines hold great promise in cancer immunotherapy, but the comparative efficacy of different vaccine platforms, particularly in the context of tumor burden (TB), remains insufficiently studied. In this research, we evaluated the safety and therapeutic efficacy of synthetic long peptide and mRNA-based vaccines, both designed to target identical neoantigens across different Lewis Lung Carcinoma (LLC) tumor burdens. We employed the LLC syngeneic mouse model, a widely used preclinical model for aggressive and immunosuppressive tumors.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!