| Literature DB >> 23356939 |
Christian G Cornelissen1, Maren Dietrich, Kai Gromann, Julia Frese, Stefan Krueger, Jörg S Sachweh, Stefan Jockenhoevel.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) can replace the lungs' gas exchange capacity in refractory lung failure. However, its limited hemocompatibility, the activation of the coagulation and complement system as well as plasma leakage and protein deposition hamper mid- to long-term use and have constrained the development of an implantable lung assist device. In a tissue engineering approach, lining the blood contact surfaces of the ECMO device with endothelial cells might overcome these limitations. As a first step towards this aim, we hypothesized that coating the oxygenator's gas exchange membrane with proteins might positively influence the attachment and proliferation of arterial endothelial cells.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23356939 PMCID: PMC3617998 DOI: 10.1186/1475-925X-12-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Eng Online ISSN: 1475-925X Impact factor: 2.819
Median and interquartile range of cell numbers / mmwith respect to material, protein coating and culture time
| Control | | 504 [493 – 505] | 559 [543 – 589] | 673 [626 – 690] |
| Polypropylene (PP) | No Coating | 99 [95 – 104] | 93 [82 – 93] | 130 [114 – 136] |
| Gelatin | 75 [72 – 82] | 127 [105 – 133] | 343 [278 – 348] | |
| Fibronectin | 252 [241 – 303] | 215 [188 – 299] | 439 [360 – 466] | |
| Fibrinogen | 109 [100 – 110] | 105 [99 – 123] | 194 [169 – 209] | |
| Collagen IV | 98 [89 – 103] | 108 [99 – 116] | 182 [173 – 288] | |
| Polymethyl-pentene (TPX) | No Coating | 57 [49 – 59] | 15 [11 – 21] | 35 [23 – 39] |
| Gelatin | 28 [27 – 29] | 30 [22 – 31] | 3 [3 – 5] | |
| Fibronectin | 302 [269 – 304] | 230 [211 – 246] | 114 [110 – 115] | |
| Fibrinogen | 50 [41 – 55] | 25 [25 – 26] | 41 [37 – 44] | |
| Collagen IV | 43 [39 – 46] | 41 [27 – 42] | 21 [21 – 23] | |
| Polydimethyl-Siloxane (PDMS) | No Coating | 2 [2 – 6] | 1 [1 – 4] | 1 [1 – 1] |
| Gelatin | 9 [6 – 13] | 4 [4 – 65] | 2 [2 – 74] | |
| Fibronectin | 463 [440 – 484] | 572 [531 – 588] | 622 [611 – 623] | |
| Fibrinogen | 10 [9 – 11] | 4 [4 – 5] | 2 [2 – 3] | |
| Collagen IV | 8 [8 – 9] | 6 [5 – 8] | 2 [2 – 5] |
Footnote: The typical maximum of cell density of endothelial cells in vivo and under in vitro culture conditions is 1,000 cells / mm2.
Figure 1Box plot of cell density after 24 hours of culture on fibronectin coated materials. Median – bar, Quartiles – boundaries of box, maximum and minimum – whiskers, intial seeding 500 cells / mm2. This diagram illustrates the high seeding efficiency on fibronectin coated PDMS which is on par with seeding efficiency on standard tissue-culture treated labware (control). Seeding on fibronectin coated PP and TPX is less efficient.
Figure 2Phase contrast microscopy of cultured endothelial cells on day 4. A – tissue culture plastic, B – Polymethylpentene, C – Polypropylene, D – Polydimethylsiloxane. Scale 100 μm. All materials except A are coated with fibronectin. Endothelial cells form confluent monolayers after 4 days of culture on tissue culture plastic (A) and PDMS (D) but neither on TPX (B) nor on PP (C).
Figure 3Normalized cell count on fibronectin coated materials. Cell numbers were normalized to the number of cells after 24 hours of culture to illustrate changes in cell number. A steady but slow increase in cell number is observed for cells on tissue-culture treated labware as well as fibronectin coated PDMS. On TPX, the cell number continuously drops while on PP, the low initial cell attachement leads to a marked increase in cell number.