Enhanced angiogenic effects of RGD, GHK peptides and copper (II) compositions in synthetic cryogel ECM model.
Zoughaib. Mohamed M; Luong. Duong D; Garifullin. Ruslan R; Gatina. Dilara Z DZ; Fedosimova. Svetlana V SV; Abdullin. Timur I TI
Key Findings
- Combining RGD, GHK, and copper (II) in a 3‑D cryogel dramatically boosts endothelial cell proliferation and angiogenic signaling.
- The GHK‑copper complex alone already enhances angiogenesis, and its effect is amplified when paired with RGD.
- Cellular antioxidant levels (glutathione) changed in line with the angiogenic response, suggesting redox involvement.
Practical Outcomes
- For DIY biohackers, the study supports the idea that GHK‑copper can promote blood‑vessel growth, especially when paired with other pro‑healing signals like RGD. However, the work is done in a lab‑grown gel, not in humans, so it doesn’t give a clear dosage or protocol for supplementation. It mainly validates the therapeutic potential of GHK‑Cu for wound‑healing or tissue‑repair applications, which could inspire future topical or injectable formulations.
Summary
Scientists put two short proteins (RGD and GHK) and copper ions into a special gel that mimics body tissue. When human blood‑vessel cells grew inside this gel, they multiplied faster, formed more blood‑vessel‑like structures, and released more healing signals. Adding copper to GHK made the effect even stronger.
Abstract
Synthetic oligopeptides are a promising alternative to natural full-length growth factors and extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins in tissue regeneration and therapeutic angiogenesis applications. In this work, angiogenic properties of dual and triple compositions containing RGD, GHK peptides and copper (II) ions (Cu<sup>2+</sup>) were for the first time studied. To reveal specific in vitro effects of these compositions in three-dimensional scaffold, adamantyl group bearing peptides, namely Ada-Ahx-GGRGD (1) and Ada-Ahx-GGGHK (2), were effectively immobilized in bioinert pHEMA macroporous cryogel via host-guest β-cyclodextrin-adamantane interaction. The cryogels were additionally functionalized with Cu<sup>2+</sup> via the formation of GHK-Cu complex. Angiogenic responses of HUVECs grown within the cryogel ECM model were analyzed. The results demonstrate that the combination of RGD with GHK and further with Cu<sup>2+</sup> dramatically increases cell proliferation, differentiation, and production of a series of angiogenesis related cytokines and growth factors. Furthermore, the level of glutathione, a key cellular antioxidant and redox regulator, was altered in relation to the angiogenic effects. These results are of particular interest for establishing the role of multiple peptide signals on regeneration related processes and for developing improved tissue engineering materials.
Study Information
pubmed
2020
2020-10-21T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.msec.2020.111660
26
59