When a car
accident or athletic injury destroys more than 20% of a muscle's mass, the body
faces a problem it often can't heal fully on its own. Without intervention,
scar tissue fills the injury site and can leave patients with permanent
weakness and limited mobility.
Now, researchers at the University of Oregon's Knight
Campus, led by Alycia Galindo, a Ph.D. candidate in Marian Hettiaratchi's lab,
are developing a potential solution: microscopic scaffolds that guide muscle
cells to regenerate organized, functional tissue.
Their findings, published in Cellular and Molecular
Bioegineering, and part of the 2025 Young Innovator collection, combine
microstructures with biochemical cues, offering a blueprint for future medical
technologies that could help damaged muscle heal faster and more effectively.
Coaxing muscle to regenerate isn't straightforward.
Muscles are intricate structures built from thousands of precisely organized
fiber bundles, composed of different proteins like actin and myosin, that must
work together to contract and move.
Current approaches, like muscle transplants, often fail because they struggle to integrate into the structure of existing muscle, often resulting lots of scar tissue and in impaired function.
Bioengineering
Ph.D. candidate Alycia Galindo, a student in Marian Hettiaratchi's lab, wanted
to overcome this challenge by providing regenerating muscle cells with
microscopic scaffolds they could follow as they regenerate. The idea is that
these tiny scaffolds could provide a roadmap for these cells to follow as they
regenerate and eventually form the complex structure of mature muscle, and
hopefully, enable more functional recoveries.
Galindo first teamed up with Kelly O'Neill, another
graduate student in the Knight Campus, who is supervised by Paul Dalton, an
associate professor in bioengineering and the Bradshaw and Holzapfel Research
Professor in Transformational Science and Mathematics. This initial partnership
grew out of the Wu Tsai Human Performance Alliance, an effort that brings
together researchers focused on understanding peak performance and advancing
human health.
Dalton is the inventor of a technology called melt electrowriting (MEW), a micro 3D printing technique that enables the production
of microscopic scaffolds with precise geometries. The technique works by
melting biocompatible polymers and using electrical forces to draw them into
tiny fibers—just micrometers wide—stacking them layer by layer into
three-dimensional structures.
"What makes MEW special is the level of control we have," Dalton explains. "It's really cool to think about applying it with muscle cells in this way."
Galindo
started by attempting to grow developing muscle cells, called myoblasts, on MEW
structures, which look like tiny grids (see left picture). She tested different
scaffold thicknesses, ranging from 10 to 30 micrometers (about 1/10th the width
of a human hair), and found that the myoblasts grew best on the 20-micrometer
structures. This size likely worked best because it closely matches the
diameter of muscle cells. While some cells attached and grew on the MEW
scaffolds, there was still room for improvement.
"We thought that combining MEW structural
scaffolds with biochemical signals could be really powerful," says Marian
Hettiaratchi, an associate professor of bioengineering and senior author on the
paper. "Cells respond to both physical and chemical cues in their
environment. Giving them the combination of physical and chemical cues could
really help the muscle cells."
Galindo then coated the MEW scaffolds with hyaluronic acid—a molecule familiar from skincare products that also occurs naturally
in the body—because it mimics the cellular microenvironment and helps cells
adhere and grow. Compared to scaffolds with no hyaluronic acid coating, the
team found that the hyaluronic acid increased the surface area available for
cell attachment and resulted in more myoblasts growing on the scaffolds.
Finally, Galindo wanted to use another common approach from the Hettiaratchi lab: the use of cell instructive molecules. These are molecules that trigger different responses from cells, like directing them to grow or attach. Previous work in the Hettiaratchi lab has focused on delivering these molecules to optimize regeneration after injuries. Galindo added a molecule to promote cellular attachment, a peptide called RGD, to the scaffolds. When she added RGD to the hyaluronic acid coating, the myoblasts stuck to the scaffolds significantly better than the uncoated scaffold versions.
Not only did
the myoblast cells stick to these RGD coated scaffolds better, they began to align
into structures that mimic muscle organization, and also began to differentiate
into mature muscle cells.
"The difference was really dramatic,"
Galindo recalls. "With RGD, the cells not only attached more readily, but
they also wrapped around the fibers and began growing along them in an
organized fashion. These cells were using the scaffold as a template for
regeneration."
While this technology remains a long way from human
use, it represents a significant step toward developing effective therapies for
large muscle injuries. This approach, combining structural scaffolds with
customizable biochemical signals, could potentially be adapted for different
types of injuries or patient needs.
"We've shown proof of concept with one set of
molecules and one scaffold design. Now we can start optimizing—testing
different growth factors, different release patterns, and different
architectural arrangements. There's a huge design space to explore" says
Hettiaratchi.
The team envisions future versions of the technology
that could be implanted during surgery or even injected as a gel that solidifies into a scaffold at the injury site. The scaffold
would provide both structural support and time-released biochemical signals,
gradually degrading as the muscle regenerates until only healthy, functional
tissue remains.
"We're not there yet," Galindo cautions, "but we've demonstrated that you can engineer scaffolds at the microscale that muscle cells recognize and respond to. That's a critical first step toward building therapies that can truly restore function after severe muscle loss."
Source: Engineered micro scaffolds show promise for helping people recover from severe muscle loss




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