posted on 2025-09-05, 03:13authored byJingjing Lin, Yushui He, Mofei Yuan, Yuanyuan He, Xiao Wang, Yuan Feng, Mingtao Luo, Ting Lan, Zhen Li, Feng Luo, Jiehua Li, Yanchao Wang, Hong Tan
Traumatic
brain injury (TBI) induces a prolonged inflammatory
response
throughout the damaged brain, which is exacerbated by the sustained
accumulation of damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), and
consequently impairs endogenous neural regeneration significantly.
To mitigate postinjury inflammation and explore the role of positively
charged scaffolds in brain repair, two distinct structures of positively
charged scaffolds were developed. Both scaffold types effectively
reduce inflammation and promote brain tissue repair by eliminating
DAMPs, markedly reducing glial scar formation, and promoting angiogenesis
in peritrauma areas within 4 weeks of implantation. Notably, scaffolds
with cationic backbones exhibit repair outcomes superior to those
of other groups due to reduced cellular stimulation and milder chronic
inflammation. This study underscores the potential of positively charged
scaffolds for central nervous system (CNS) regeneration and provides
novel insights into the design of tissue engineering scaffolds for
CNS repair.