| Literature DB >> 23251085 |
Judee Grace Nemeno-Guanzon1, Soojung Lee, Johan Robert Berg, Yong Hwa Jo, Jee Eun Yeo, Bo Mi Nam, Yong-Gon Koh, Jeong Ik Lee.
Abstract
Over the years, cardiovascular diseases continue to increase and affect not only human health but also the economic stability worldwide. The advancement in tissue engineering is contributing a lot in dealing with this immediate need of alleviating human health. Blood vessel diseases are considered as major cardiovascular health problems. Although blood vessel transplantation is the most convenient treatment, it has been delimited due to scarcity of donors and the patient's conditions. However, tissue-engineered blood vessels are promising alternatives as mode of treatment for blood vessel defects. The purpose of this paper is to show the importance of the advancement on biofabrication technology for treatment of soft tissue defects particularly for vascular tissues. This will also provide an overview and update on the current status of tissue reconstruction especially from autologous stem cells, scaffolds, and scaffold-free cellular transplantable constructs. The discussion of this paper will be focused on the historical view of cardiovascular tissue engineering and stem cell biology. The representative studies featured in this paper are limited within the last decade in order to trace the trend and evolution of techniques for blood vessel tissue engineering.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23251085 PMCID: PMC3518873 DOI: 10.1155/2012/956345
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Biotechnol ISSN: 1110-7243
Figure 1Tissue engineering triad of cells or source, signals (provided chemically by growth factors/cytokines or physically by a bioreactor), and the scaffold which acts as a template for tissue formation allowing the cells to migrate, adhere, and produce tissue. These components make up the Triple S (Source, Scaffold, and Signal) of tissue engineering. Any combination of these triad components has been considered in various studies in cell therapy which accounts for SS (Scaffold/Signal, Scaffold/Source, and Signal/Source). Finally, these three components (Source, Scaffold, and Signal or SSS) have also been considered altogether in some research projects.
Figure 2Bottom-up and Top-down approaches to tissue engineering. In the bottom-up approach there are multiple methods for creating modular tissues, which are then assembled into engineered tissues with specific microarchitectural features. In the top-down approach, cells and biomaterial scaffolds are combined and cultured until the cells fill the support structure to create an engineered tissue. Nichol, J. W. and Khademhosseini, A. 2009, Page 10 Soft Matter. Reproduced by permission of The Royal Society of Chemistry.
Figure 3Main Tunicae of the blood vessels. Outer Tunica Adventitia, middle Tunica Media, and inner Tunica Intima, their corresponding cell composition and functions.
Stem cells for tissue engineering of blood vessel, their advantages and disadvantages.
| Cells | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mesenchymal Stem Cells (MSCs) | (i) self-renewal capacity | (i) low frequencies of existence | [ |
|
| |||
| ASCs (adipose-derived stem cells) | (i) superior multi-differentiation potential | (i) susceptible to apoptosis during isolation | [ |
|
| |||
| Embryonic stem cells (ESCs) | (i) pluripotent | (i) low induction efficiency | [ |
|
| |||
| Endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) | (i) have exponential proliferation rate | (i) unknown | [ |
|
| |||
| Bone marrow cells (BMCs) | (i) readily accessible autologous cell source | (i) may induce calcification and thrombus formation | [ |
|
| |||
| Human artery-derived fibroblast (HAFs) | (i) promotes enhanced ECM formation and maturation | [ | |
|
| |||
| Human umbilical cord vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) | (i) important in endothelialization after transplantation | (i) time-consuming isolation | [ |
Representative studies on scaffold-based tissue-engineered blood vessels.
| Publication year | Scaffold | Source/signal | Reported results | Type of study | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1999 | Tubular biodegradable polyglycolic acid (PGA) scaffolds | SMC and ECs from bovine aorta/pulsatile perfusion system in a bioreactor with supplemented medium | (1) the gross appearance of the vessels was identical to that of native arteries |
| [ |
|
| |||||
| 2000 | Microvessels with fibronectin-collagen 3D gels | Umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC)/Bcl-2 | (1) human umbilical-vein EC (HUVEC) within mixed fibronectin-collagen 3D gels induced tube formation |
| [ |
|
| |||||
| 2004 | Polyglycolic acid-poly-L-lactic acid (PGA-PLLA) scaffolds | EPC from human umbilical cord were used to generate EPC-derived EC | (1) EPC-derived EC can be expanded |
| [ |
|
| |||||
| 2005 | Collagen/elastin tubular scaffolds | SMC under pulsatile flow condition | (1) SMCs were uniformly distributed throughout EDC/NHS crosslinked collagen/elastin construct |
| [ |
|
| |||||
| 2005 | Sandwich chitosan tubular scaffold | Rabbit Smooth muscle cells by employing industrial knitting process and thermally-induced phase-separation techniques | (1) chitosan scaffold showed proper swelling property and high suture retention |
| [ |
|
| |||||
| 2007 | Poly(glycerol sebacate) (PGS) films and scaffolds | Baboon endothelial progenitor cells (BaEPCs) and baboon smooth muscle cells (BaSMCs) | (1) BaSMCs were distributed throughout the scaffolds and synthesized ECM |
| [ |
|
| |||||
| 2008 | PGA (polyglycolic acid) fiber mesh | SMC/pulsatile stimulation from a Bioreactor | (1) elastic vessel wall was formed after 8 weeks of dynamic engineering. |
| [ |
|
| |||||
| 2009 | 3D collagen/fibro-nectin gels supported by a nonwoven, degradable PGA (polyglycolic acid) matrix | HUVECs, EC and SMC | (1) after transplantation PGA-supported gels, Bcl-2-HUVEC retained the ability to form microvessels invested by mouse SMC. |
| [ |
|
| |||||
| 2010 | PGA (polyglycolic acid) unwoven mesh | SMC derived from hASCs/pulsatile stimulation from a Bioreactor, TGF- | (1) hASCs acquired SMC phenotype with SMC- related markers expression |
| [ |
|
| |||||
| 2012 | Macroporous nanofibrous scaffold | ESCs stimulated with retinoic acid with LacZ genetic labeling under SMC alpha promoter | (1) RA enhanced SMC gene expression while inhibiting pluripotency of ESC |
| [ |
|
| |||||
| 2012 | Biotubular scaffold composed of polyglycolide knitted fiber, and an L-lactide and | Amniotic Fluid | (1) well-formed vasculature without stenosis or thrombosis, and calcification |
| [ |
|
| |||||
| 2012 | Tissue engineered blood vessel from amniotic membrane | Amniotic membrane (AM) as the natural membrane, endothelial cells/physiological shear stress (SS) | (1) shear stress application maintained the intact monolayer of EC in the vessel's lumen |
| [ |
|
| |||||
| 2012 | Tubular hydrogels of circumferentially aligned peptide amphiphile nanofibers | SMCs by applying low shear stress and ionic crosslinking | (1) arterial cell scaffolds encapsulates and orient vascular cells |
| [ |
Representative studies on cell-based tissue-engineered blood vessels.
| Publication year | Construct | Source | Technique applied | Reported results | Type of study | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1998 | Completely biological tissue-engineered human blood vessel | SMCs, human fibroblasts, endothelial cells | (i) cell culture in a medium with ascorbic acid | (1) TEBV displayed well-defined three-layered organization, with numerous ECM proteins including elastin |
| [ |
|
| ||||||
| 2000 | Tissue-engineered blood vessel from smooth muscles | SMCs | (i) cell culture in a medium with serum and ascorbic acid | (1) TEBV composed of endothelium, media, and adventitia and resembling human artery was produced |
| [ |
|
| ||||||
| 2001 | Small-diameter neovessels | EPCs | (i) decellularization of porcine iliac vessels | (1) endothelial progenitor cell-seeded grafts remained patent for 130 days |
| [ |
|
| ||||||
| 2005 | Small-diameter vessel | BMCs | (i) induction of BMC differentiation into SMCs | (1) vascular grafts seeded with BMCs remained patent for up to 8 weeks |
| [ |
|
| ||||||
| 2006 | Human TEBV | adult human fibroblasts extracted from skin biopsies | (i) sheet-based tissue engineering after vast cell expansion | (1) TEBV exhibited properties similar to human blood vessels, without exogenous scaffolding |
| [ |
|
| ||||||
| 2009 | Scaffold-free small-diameter vascular construct | SMCs and fibroblasts | (i) bioprinting using vascular smooth muscle cells and fibroblasts | (1) vascular cells which were aggregated into distinct units (spheroids and cylinders) were printed layer-by-layer and molded using agarose rods as templates |
| [ |
|
| ||||||
| 2009 | Scaffold-free arterial mimetics | Human aortic Endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells | (i) ECs and SMCs were co-cultured in platform that mimic either healthy or diseased blood vessels | (1) seeding of near confluent ECs on the scaffold induced increased |
| [ |
|
| ||||||
| 2010 | Self-assembled microtissue vessel building blocks | Human artery-derived fibroblasts and HUVECs | (i) pulsatile and circumferential mechanical stimulation in a bioreactor composed of pulsatile pump, self-assembly device, and medium reservoir | (1) significant ECM formation and maturation by the self-assembled microtissues |
| [ |
|
| ||||||
| 2011 | Implantable human arterial grafts | Human dermal fibroblasts | (i) fibroblasts seeding on fibrin gel | (1) cells cultured in pulsed-flow bioreactor produced more collagen and with higher burst pressures |
| [ |
|
| ||||||
| 2012 | Small-diameter tissue-engineered vascular graft | Marrow-derived mesenchy-mal stem cells (MSCs) | (i) cell sheet engineering | (1) adhesion assay revealed that MSCs share similar EC's antiplatelet adhesion property |
| [ |
Figure 4Trends in blood vessel tissue engineering.The patient's condition is the main basis for treatment of blood vessel defects. Autologous blood vessel transplantation is still the standard treatment. Conversely, tissue-engineered blood vessels (TEBV), fabricated either via scaffold or scaffold-free techniques, are the alternative sources of treatment.