Literature DB >> 23734857

Carbon nanotubes instruct physiological growth and functionally mature syncytia: nongenetic engineering of cardiac myocytes.

Valentina Martinelli1, Giada Cellot, Francesca Maria Toma, Carlin S Long, John H Caldwell, Lorena Zentilin, Mauro Giacca, Antonio Turco, Maurizio Prato, Laura Ballerini, Luisa Mestroni.   

Abstract

Myocardial tissue engineering currently represents one of the most realistic strategies for cardiac repair. We have recently discovered the ability of carbon nanotube scaffolds to promote cell division and maturation in cardiomyocytes. Here, we test the hypothesis that carbon nanotube scaffolds promote cardiomyocyte growth and maturation by altering the gene expression program, implementing the cell electrophysiological properties and improving networking and maturation of functional syncytia. In our study, we combine microscopy, biological and electrophysiological methodologies, and calcium imaging, to verify whether neonatal rat ventricular myocytes cultured on substrates of multiwall carbon nanotubes acquire a physiologically more mature phenotype compared to control (gelatin). We show that the carbon nanotube substrate stimulates the induction of a gene expression profile characteristic of terminal differentiation and physiological growth, with a 2-fold increase of α-myosin heavy chain (P < 0.001) and upregulation of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+) ATPase 2a. In contrast, markers of pathological hypertrophy remain unchanged (β-myosin heavy chain, skeletal α-actin, atrial natriuretic peptide). These modifications are paralleled by an increase of connexin-43 gene expression, gap junctions and functional syncytia. Moreover, carbon nanotubes appear to exert a protective effect against the pathologic stimulus of phenylephrine. Finally, cardiomyocytes on carbon nanotubes demonstrate a more mature electrophysiological phenotype of syncytia and intracellular calcium signaling. Thus, carbon nanotubes interacting with cardiomyocytes have the ability to promote physiological growth and functional maturation. These properties are unique in the current vexing field of tissue engineering, and offer unprecedented perspectives in the development of innovative therapies for cardiac repair.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23734857     DOI: 10.1021/nn4002193

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ACS Nano        ISSN: 1936-0851            Impact factor:   15.881


  27 in total

1.  Micro- and nano-patterned conductive graphene-PEG hybrid scaffolds for cardiac tissue engineering.

Authors:  Alec S T Smith; Hyok Yoo; Hyunjung Yi; Eun Hyun Ahn; Justin H Lee; Guozheng Shao; Ekaterina Nagornyak; Michael A Laflamme; Charles E Murry; Deok-Ho Kim
Journal:  Chem Commun (Camb)       Date:  2017-06-29       Impact factor: 6.222

Review 2.  Injectable Hydrogels for Cardiac Tissue Engineering.

Authors:  Brisa Peña; Melissa Laughter; Susan Jett; Teisha J Rowland; Matthew R G Taylor; Luisa Mestroni; Daewon Park
Journal:  Macromol Biosci       Date:  2018-05-07       Impact factor: 4.979

Review 3.  Diverse Applications of Nanomedicine.

Authors:  Beatriz Pelaz; Christoph Alexiou; Ramon A Alvarez-Puebla; Frauke Alves; Anne M Andrews; Sumaira Ashraf; Lajos P Balogh; Laura Ballerini; Alessandra Bestetti; Cornelia Brendel; Susanna Bosi; Monica Carril; Warren C W Chan; Chunying Chen; Xiaodong Chen; Xiaoyuan Chen; Zhen Cheng; Daxiang Cui; Jianzhong Du; Christian Dullin; Alberto Escudero; Neus Feliu; Mingyuan Gao; Michael George; Yury Gogotsi; Arnold Grünweller; Zhongwei Gu; Naomi J Halas; Norbert Hampp; Roland K Hartmann; Mark C Hersam; Patrick Hunziker; Ji Jian; Xingyu Jiang; Philipp Jungebluth; Pranav Kadhiresan; Kazunori Kataoka; Ali Khademhosseini; Jindřich Kopeček; Nicholas A Kotov; Harald F Krug; Dong Soo Lee; Claus-Michael Lehr; Kam W Leong; Xing-Jie Liang; Mei Ling Lim; Luis M Liz-Marzán; Xiaowei Ma; Paolo Macchiarini; Huan Meng; Helmuth Möhwald; Paul Mulvaney; Andre E Nel; Shuming Nie; Peter Nordlander; Teruo Okano; Jose Oliveira; Tai Hyun Park; Reginald M Penner; Maurizio Prato; Victor Puntes; Vincent M Rotello; Amila Samarakoon; Raymond E Schaak; Youqing Shen; Sebastian Sjöqvist; Andre G Skirtach; Mahmoud G Soliman; Molly M Stevens; Hsing-Wen Sung; Ben Zhong Tang; Rainer Tietze; Buddhisha N Udugama; J Scott VanEpps; Tanja Weil; Paul S Weiss; Itamar Willner; Yuzhou Wu; Lily Yang; Zhao Yue; Qian Zhang; Qiang Zhang; Xian-En Zhang; Yuliang Zhao; Xin Zhou; Wolfgang J Parak
Journal:  ACS Nano       Date:  2017-03-14       Impact factor: 15.881

4.  Tough and flexible CNT-polymeric hybrid scaffolds for engineering cardiac constructs.

Authors:  Mahshid Kharaziha; Su Ryon Shin; Mehdi Nikkhah; Seda Nur Topkaya; Nafiseh Masoumi; Nasim Annabi; Mehmet R Dokmeci; Ali Khademhosseini
Journal:  Biomaterials       Date:  2014-06-10       Impact factor: 12.479

5.  Conductive Silk-Polypyrrole Composite Scaffolds with Bioinspired Nanotopographic Cues for Cardiac Tissue Engineering.

Authors:  Jonathan H Tsui; Nicholas A Ostrovsky-Snider; David M P Yama; Jordan D Donohue; Jong Seob Choi; Rakchanok Chavanachat; Jesse D Larson; Amanda R Murphy; Deok-Ho Kim
Journal:  J Mater Chem B       Date:  2018-06-18       Impact factor: 6.331

6.  Silicon nanowire-induced maturation of cardiomyocytes derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells.

Authors:  Yu Tan; Dylan Richards; Ruoyu Xu; Skylar Stewart-Clark; Santhosh Kumar Mani; Thomas Keith Borg; Donald R Menick; Bozhi Tian; Ying Mei
Journal:  Nano Lett       Date:  2015-04-07       Impact factor: 11.189

7.  A novel graphene oxide polymer gel platform for cardiac tissue engineering application.

Authors:  Li Zhao
Journal:  3 Biotech       Date:  2019-10-18       Impact factor: 2.406

8.  Injectable Carbon Nanotube-Functionalized Reverse Thermal Gel Promotes Cardiomyocytes Survival and Maturation.

Authors:  Brisa Peña; Susanna Bosi; Brian A Aguado; Daniele Borin; Nikki L Farnsworth; Evgenia Dobrinskikh; Teisha J Rowland; Valentina Martinelli; Mark Jeong; Matthew R G Taylor; Carlin S Long; Robin Shandas; Orfeo Sbaizero; Maurizio Prato; Kristi S Anseth; Daewon Park; Luisa Mestroni
Journal:  ACS Appl Mater Interfaces       Date:  2017-09-12       Impact factor: 9.229

9.  A Self-Healing, All-Organic, Conducting, Composite Peptide Hydrogel as Pressure Sensor and Electrogenic Cell Soft Substrate.

Authors:  Priyadarshi Chakraborty; Tom Guterman; Nofar Adadi; Moran Yadid; Tamar Brosh; Lihi Adler-Abramovich; Tal Dvir; Ehud Gazit
Journal:  ACS Nano       Date:  2018-12-31       Impact factor: 15.881

10.  Tunable electroconductive decellularized extracellular matrix hydrogels for engineering human cardiac microphysiological systems.

Authors:  Jonathan H Tsui; Andrea Leonard; Nathan D Camp; Joseph T Long; Zeid Y Nawas; Rakchanok Chavanachat; Alec S T Smith; Jong Seob Choi; Zhipeng Dong; Eun Hyun Ahn; Alejandro Wolf-Yadlin; Charles E Murry; Nathan J Sniadecki; Deok-Ho Kim
Journal:  Biomaterials       Date:  2021-03-18       Impact factor: 12.479

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