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Dive into the research topics where Michael C. Hacker is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael C. Hacker.


FEBS Letters | 2004

Basic fibroblast growth factor enhances PPARγ ligand-induced adipogenesis of mesenchymal stem cells

Markus Neubauer; Claudia Fischbach; Petra Bauer-Kreisel; Esther Lieb; Michael C. Hacker; Joerg Tessmar; Michaela Schulz; Achim Goepferich; Torsten Blunk

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are capable of differentiating into a variety of lineages, including bone, cartilage, or fat, depending on the inducing stimuli and specific growth and differentiation factors. It is widely acknowledged that basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) modulates chondrogenic and osteogenic differentiation of MSCs, but thorough investigations of its effects on adipogenic differentiation are lacking. In this study, we demonstrate on the cellular and molecular level that supplementation of bFGF in different phases of cell culture leads to a strong enhancement of adipogenesis of MSCs, as induced by an adipogenic hormonal cocktail. In cultures receiving bFGF, mRNA expression of peroxisome proliferator‐activated receptor γ2 (PPARγ2), a key transcription factor in adipogenesis, was upregulated even prior to adipogenic induction. In order to investigate the effects of bFGF on PPARγ ligand‐induced adipogenic differentiation, the thiazolidinedione troglitazone was administered as a single adipogenic inducer. Basic FGF was demonstrated to also strongly increase adipogenesis induced by troglitazone, that is, bFGF clearly increased the responsiveness of MSCs to a PPARγ ligand.


Tissue Engineering | 2003

Poly(D,L-lactic acid)-Poly(ethylene glycol)-Monomethyl Ether Diblock Copolymers Control Adhesion and Osteoblastic Differentiation of Marrow Stromal Cells

E. Lieb; Jörg Tessmar; Michael C. Hacker; Claudia Fischbach; D. Rose; Torsten Blunk; Antonios G. Mikos; Achim Göpferich; Michaela Schulz

Biodegradable polymers, such as poly(lactic acid) (PLA) and poly(lactic-coglycolic acid) (PLGA), are attractive materials for tissue engineering because of their degradative and mechanical properties, which permit scaffolds to be tailored to the individual requirements of different tissues. Although these materials support tissue development, their chemical properties offer no control of cell adhesion or function because their surfaces become immediately masked by adsorbing serum proteins when the materials come into contact with body fluids. Furthermore, adhesion proteins undergo conformational changes and a decrease in bioactivity when adsorbed to hydrophobic materials, such as PLA. To overcome these limitations, we modified the properties of PLA by synthesizing a diblock copolymer with poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG), which is known to reduce the amount of adsorbed proteins and to modify their conformation. By altering the PEG content of these diblock copolymers we were able to control the adsorption of adhesion proteins and, because cell adhesion takes place only in the presence of serum proteins, to control cell adhesion and cell shape. Marrow stromal cell differentiation to the osteoblastic phenotype was strongly improved on PEG-PLA compared with PLA, PLGA and tissue culture polystyrene and led to a 2-fold increase in alkaline phosphatase activity and mineralization.


Biomacromolecules | 2008

Synthesis and Characterization of Injectable, Thermally and Chemically Gelable, Amphiphilic Poly(N-isopropylacrylamide)-Based Macromers

Michael C. Hacker; Leda Klouda; Brandy B. Ma; James D. Kretlow; Antonios G. Mikos

In this study, we synthesized and characterized a series of macromers based on poly( N-isopropylacrylamide) that undergo thermally induced physical gelation and, following chemical modification, can be chemically cross-linked. Macromers with number average molecular weights typically ranging from 2000-3500 Da were synthesized via free radical polymerization from, in addition to N-isopropylacrylamide, pentaerythritol diacrylate monostearate, a bifunctional monomer containing a long hydrophobic chain, acrylamide, a hydrophilic monomer, and hydroxyethyl acrylate, a hydrophilic monomer used to provide hydroxyl groups for further chemical modification. Results indicated that the hydrophobic-hydrophilic balance achieved by varying the relative concentrations of comonomers used during synthesis was an important parameter in controlling the transition temperature of the macromers in solution and stability of the resultant gels. Storage moduli of the macromers increased over 4 orders of magnitude once gelation occurred above the transition temperature. Furthermore, chemical cross-linking of these macromers resulted in gels with increased stability compared to uncross-linked controls. These results demonstrate the feasibility of synthesizing poly( N-isopropylacrylamide)-based macromers that undergo tandem gelation and establish key criteria relating to the transition temperature and stability of these materials. The data suggest that these materials may be attractive substrates for tissue engineering and cellular delivery applications as the combination of mechanistically independent gelation techniques used in tandem may offer superior materials with regard to gelation kinetics and stability.


Tissue Engineering | 2004

Three-Dimensional in Vitro Model of Adipogenesis: Comparison of Culture Conditions

Claudia Fischbach; Jochen Seufert; Harald Staiger; Michael C. Hacker; Markus Neubauer; Achim Göpferich; Torsten Blunk

In vivo and in vitro studies have demonstrated both promise and current limitations in tissue engineering of fat. Herein, we report the establishment of a well-defined three-dimensional (3-D) in vitro model useful for systematic investigations of 3-D adipogenesis. Polyglycolic acid fiber meshes were dynamically seeded with 3T3-L1 preadipocytes; subsequently, cell-polymer constructs were hormonally induced and cultivation under three different conditions was evaluated. Regarding tissue coherence and intracellular lipid content, culture of cell-polymer constructs either dynamically in well plates or in stirred bioreactors yielded similar results, which were distinctly improved compared with static conditions in well plates. At the protein and mRNA levels, significantly increased expression of genes characteristic for a mature adipose phenotype was demonstrated for constructs dynamically cultured in well plates, as compared with static conditions. Furthermore, investigation of lipolysis under stimulating and inhibiting conditions demonstrated functionality of the dynamically differentiated constructs. Using dynamic culture conditions, the presented in vitro model system is suggested as a valuable tool serving both fat tissue engineering and basic research by facilitating investigations of tissue-inherent features not possible under conventional 2-D culture conditions.


Acta Biomaterialia | 2011

Thermoresponsive, in situ cross-linkable hydrogels based on N-isopropylacrylamide: Fabrication, characterization and mesenchymal stem cell encapsulation

Leda Klouda; Kevin R. Perkins; Brendan M. Watson; Michael C. Hacker; Stephanie J. Bryant; Robert M. Raphael; F. Kurtis Kasper; Antonios G. Mikos

Hydrogels that solidify in response to a dual, physical and chemical, mechanism upon temperature increase were fabricated and characterized. The hydrogels were based on N-isopropylacrylamide, which renders them thermoresponsive, and contained covalently cross-linkable moieties in the macromers. The effects of the macromer end group, acrylate or methacrylate, and the fabrication conditions on the degradative and swelling properties of the hydrogels were investigated. The hydrogels exhibited higher swelling below their lower critical solution temperature (LCST). When immersed in cell culture medium at physiological temperature, which was above their LCST, hydrogels showed constant swelling and no degradation over 8 weeks, with the methacrylated hydrogels showing greater swelling than their acrylated analogs. In addition, hydrogels immersed in cell culture medium under the same conditions showed lower swelling compared with phosphate-buffered saline. The interplay between chemical cross-linking and thermally induced phase separation affected the swelling characteristics of the hydrogels in different media. Mesenchymal stem cells encapsulated in the hydrogels in vitro were viable over 3 weeks and markers of osteogenic differentiation were detected when the cells were cultured with osteogenic supplements. Hydrogel mineralization in the absence of cells was observed in cell culture medium with the addition of fetal bovine serum and β-glycerol phosphate. The results suggest that these hydrogels may be suitable as carriers for cell delivery in tissue engineering.


Biomaterials | 2003

Towards biomimetic scaffolds: Anhydrous scaffold fabrication from biodegradable amine-reactive diblock copolymers

Michael C. Hacker; Jörg Tessmar; Markus Neubauer; Andrea Blaimer; Torsten Blunk; Achim Göpferich; Michaela Schulz

The development of biomimetic materials and their processing into three-dimensional cell carrying scaffolds is one promising tissue engineering strategy to improve cell adhesion, growth and differentiation on polymeric constructs developing mature and viable tissue. This study was concerned with the fabrication of scaffolds made from amine-reactive diblock copolymers, N-succinimidyl tartrate monoamine poly(ethylene glycol)-block-poly(D,L-lactic acid), which are able to suppress unspecific protein adsorption and to covalently bind proteins or peptides. An appropriate technique for their processing had to be both anhydrous, to avoid hydrolysis of the active ester, and suitable for the generation of interconnected porous structures. Attempts to fabricate scaffolds utilizing hard paraffin microparticles as hexane-extractable porogens failed. Consequently, a technique was developed involving lipid microparticles, which served as biocompatible porogens on which the scaffold forming polymer was precipitated in the porogen extraction media (n-hexane). Porogen melting during the extraction and polymer precipitation step led to an interconnected network of pores. Suitable lipid mixtures and their melting points, extraction conditions (temperature and time) and a low-toxic polymer solvent system were determined for their use in processing diblock copolymers of different molecular weights (22 and 42 kDa) into highly porous off-the-shelf cell carriers ready for easy surface modification towards biomimetic scaffolds. Insulin was employed to demonstrate the principal of instant protein coupling to a prefabricated scaffold.


Biomacromolecules | 2008

Synthesis and conformational evaluation of a novel gene delivery vector for human mesenchymal stem cells.

Anita Saraf; Michael C. Hacker; Balaji Sitharaman; K. Jane Grande-Allen; Michael A. Barry; Antonios G. Mikos

We have synthesized a novel gene delivery vector by covalently combining branched polyethylenimine (bPEI) and hyaluronic acid (HA) with the aim of improving transfection of bPEI into human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) while maintaining cell viability. Because of the opposite charges on bPEI and HA, the bPEI-HA vector forms a zwitterionic polymer capable of inter- and intramolecular interactions. We have characterized the hydrodynamic radius of bPEI-HA and bPEI-HA/DNA complexes at ambient and physiological temperatures, as well as at a range of salt concentrations using light scattering, and investigated the effect of the size of transfecting complexes on gene delivery. We found that by increasing the salt concentration from 150 to 1000 mM of NaCl, the mean hydrodynamic radius (R(h)) of bPEI-HA increases from 2.0 +/- 1.1 to 366.0 +/- 149.0 nm. However, increasing the salt concentration decreases the mean R(h) of bPEI-HA/DNA complexes from 595.0 +/- 44.6 to 106.0 +/- 19.2 nm at 25 degrees C and from 767.0 +/- 137.2 to 74.0 +/- 23.0 nm at 37 degrees C. hMSCs transfected with smaller complexes showed a significant increase in transfection from 3.8 +/- 1.5% to 19.1 +/- 4.4%. Similarly, bPEI-HA performed significantly better than bPEI in terms of cell viability (86.0 +/- 6.7% with bPEI-HA versus 7.0 +/- 2.8% with bPEI, 24 h post exposure at the highest concentration of 500 mg/mL) and maximum transfection efficiencies (12.0 +/- 4.2% with bPEI/DNA complexes and 33.6 +/- 13.9% with bPEI-HA/DNA complexes). Thus, modifying bPEI by covalent conjugation with HA improves its performance as a gene delivery vector in hMSCs. This presents a promising approach to altering hMSCs for tissue engineering and other applications.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A | 2009

Biodegradable fumarate-based drug-delivery systems for ophthalmic applications.

Michael C. Hacker; A. Haesslein; H. Ueda; W. J. Foster; Charles A. Garcia; Daniel M. Ammon; R.N. Borazjani; J.F. Kunzler; Joseph C. Salamone; Antonios G. Mikos

The function of a photocrosslinked poly(propylene fumarate) (PPF)/poly(N-vinyl pyrrolidone) (PVP) matrix for the sustained release of three ophthalmic model drugs, acetazolamide (AZ), dichlorphenamide (DP), and timolol maleate (TM), was investigated. The drugs differ in molecular weight and degree of dissociation in aqueous environments; both are parameters that significantly influence drug diffusivity. AZ, DP, and TM-loaded cylindrical rods (10 mm length, 0.6 mm diameter) were fabricated by photoinduced cross-copolymerization of PPF and N-vinyl pyrrolidone (NVP) in molds. The released amounts of AZ, DP, TM, and NVP were determined by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The effects of drug properties and loading on the release kinetics were investigated. The in vitro release of AZ, DP, and TM was well sustained from the polymer matrices over a period of approximately 210, 270, and 250 days, respectively. The release kinetics correlated with the HPLC retention profiles of the different drugs. Following a small initial burst release (<10%), a dual modality release controlled by diffusion and bulk erosion was found for all drugs. Drug release rates of up to 4 microg/day were reached. Matrix drug loading generally affected the extent of the burst release, release kinetics, as well as the matrix water content and matrix degradation that were determined gravimetrically. Microcomputed tomography was used to image structural and dimensional changes of the devices. A preliminary rabbit implantation study revealed promising ocular biocompatibility of drug-free PPF/PVP matrices. All results indicate the potential of photocrosslinked PPF-based matrices as polymeric carriers for long-term ophthalmic drug delivery.


Biomaterials | 2009

Cytocompatibility evaluation of amphiphilic, thermally responsive and chemically crosslinkable macromers for in situ forming hydrogels

Leda Klouda; Michael C. Hacker; James D. Kretlow; Antonios G. Mikos

The cytocompatibility of amphiphilic, thermoresponsive and chemically crosslinkable macromers was examined in vitro. Macromers synthesized from pentaerythritol diacrylate monostearate, N-isopropylacrylamide, acrylamide and hydroxyethyl acrylate in different molar ratios and with varying molecular weights and lower critical solution temperatures were evaluated for cytocompatibility with rat fibroblasts. Cell viabilities of over 60% for all and over 80% for most formulations were observed after 24-h incubation with macromers with molecular weights in the range of approximately 1500-3000 Da. The chemical modification of the macromers with a (meth)acrylate group was shown to have a time- and dose-dependent effect on cell viability. Uncrosslinked macromers with lower degrees of (meth)acrylation allowed for cell viability of over 60% for up to 6 h. (Meth)acrylated macromers with lower critical solution temperature (LCST) closer to physiological temperature allowed for higher cell viabilities as opposed to those with lower LCST. The data suggest that when the (meth)acrylated macromers are assembled into a physical gel, their cytotoxicity is diminished. After gel phase separation, cytotoxicity increased. This study gives information on the parameters that enable viable cell encapsulation for in situ forming hydrogel systems.


Biomacromolecules | 2010

Synthesis and Characterization of Dual Stimuli Responsive Macromers Based on Poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) and Poly(vinylphosphonic acid)

James D. Kretlow; Michael C. Hacker; Leda Klouda; Brandy B. Ma; Antonios G. Mikos

Stimulus responsive materials hold great promise in biological applications as they can react to changes in physiological stimuli to produce a desired effect. Stimulus responsive macromers designed to respond to temperature changes at or around 37 degrees C and the presence of divalent cations were synthesized from N-isopropylacrylamide, pentaerythritol diacrylate monostearate, 2-hydroxyethyl acrylate, and vinylphosphonic acid by free radical polymerization. Monomers were incorporated into the macromers in ratios approximating the molar feed ratios, and macromers underwent thermogelation around normal body temperature (36.2-40.5 degrees C) as determined by rheology and differential scanning calorimetry. Macromers containing vinylphosphonic acid interacted with calcium ions in solution, displaying decreased sol-gel transition temperatures (27.6-34.4 degrees C in 100 mM CaCl(2)), with decreases of greater magnitude observed for macromers with higher relative vinylphosphonic acid content. Critical micellar concentrations also decreased in a dose-dependent manner with increased vinylphosphonic acid incorporation in solutions with CaCl(2) but not in solutions with NaCl. These dually responsive macromers allow examination of the effect of increasing vinylphosphonic acid content in a macromer, which holds promise in biological applications such as drug and cell delivery or tissue engineering due to the macromer responsiveness at physiological temperatures and concentrations of calcium.

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Tobias Flath

Leipzig University of Applied Sciences

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