| Literature DB >> 24348426 |
Celia Snyman1, Kyle P Goetsch1, Kathryn H Myburgh2, Carola U Niesler1.
Abstract
Bioengineering skeletal muscle often requires customized equipment and intricate casting techniques. One of the major hurdles when initially trying to establish in vitro tissue engineered muscle constructs is the lack of consistency across published methodology. Although this diversity allows for specialization according to specific research goals, lack of standardization hampers comparative efforts. Differences in cell type, number and density, variability in matrix and scaffold usage as well as inconsistency in the distance between and type of adhesion posts complicates initial establishment of the technique with confidence. We describe an inexpensive, but readily adaptable silicone chamber system for the generation of skeletal muscle constructs that can readily be standardized and used to elucidate myoblast behavior in a three-dimensional space. Muscle generation, regeneration and adaptation can also be investigated in this model, which is more advanced than differentiated myotubes.Entities:
Keywords: hydrogel constructs; in vitro skeletal muscle tissue; three-dimensional assays; tissue engineering
Year: 2013 PMID: 24348426 PMCID: PMC3842895 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2013.00349
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
A comparison of published methods for the generation of bio-artificial skeletal muscle.
| Silicone rubber tubes cut lengthwise in 35 mm dishes | Reversible gene therapy | Velcro pads or stainless steel mesh | C2C12 mouse myoblasts (1–4 × 106 cells/well) | Collagen (1.6 mg/ml) and Matrigel (Ratio of 6:1 v/v) | Vandenburgh et al., |
| Sylgard moulds produced in a vacuum-moulding process around Teflon spacers; 96-well plates | Flexible silicone posts | Primary mouse myoblasts (0.2 × 106 cells/well) | Collagen (1 mg/ml) and Matrigel (Ratio of 6:1 v/v) Fibrinogen–thrombin (0.5 mg/ml) and thrombin (1 U/ml) | Vandenburgh et al., | |
| Moulds cast from 2% agarose in PBS around Teflon spacers; 24-well plates | Heart muscle kinetics | Flexible Sylgard posts | Neonatal rat heart cells (0.62 × 106 cells/well) | Fibrinogen (5 mg/ml) and Matrigel (100 μl/ml) polymerized with thrombin (32:1 v/v) | Hansen et al., |
| Rectangular casting moulds (see Hansen et al., | Interaction between cells and surrounding matrix | Silicone pins | Primary human myoblasts (0.66 × 106 cells/well) | Fibrin-based matrix | Chiron et al., |
| Mechanical Cell Stimulator, version 4.0 (MCS4) Silicone rubber tissue moulds; 6-well plates | Mechanical stimulation to improve tissue-engineered human skeletal muscle | Stainless steel pins | Primary human skeletal muscle cells (1 × 106 cells/well) | Collagen 1 (0.8 mg/ml) and Matrigel (Ratio of 6:1 v/v) | Powell et al., |
| Silicone tube cut lengthwise (ends sealed with PDMS); 6-well plates | Hydrogel matrix combinations; influence on contractile function of engineered muscle tissue | Velcro adhesion pads | Primary rat skeletal myoblasts (6 × 106 cells/well) | Collagen 1 (1.4 mg/ml) and Matrigel Fibrinogen (2, 4 or 6 mg/ml) and Matrigel (10%, 20% or 40% v/v) | Hinds et al., |
| Commercially available single-well chamber slides | Optimized culture parameters improved reproducibility and the cellular architecture | Polyethylene mesh | Primary rat muscle derived cells (Cell count not stated; 3.2 ml/well) | Collagen 1 | Smith et al., |
| Sylgard tissue moulds cast from patterned master templates of coated photo-resistant silicone wafers | Muscle cell alignment | Array of silicone posts | C2C12 mouse myoblasts (1 × 106 cells/well) Primary rat skeletal myoblasts (2 × 106 cells/well) | Collagen I (1 mg/ml) and fibrinogen (2 mg/ml) (ratio of 1:0, 3:1, 1:1, 1:3, 0:1) Thrombin (0.4 U/mg fibrinogen) Matrigel added to all combinations | Bian and Bursac, |
| Precast micro-patterned wells | Formation of muscle for use in bioactuators | PDMS cantilevers | C2C12 mouse myoblasts (400 cells/micro-patterned well) | Collagen 1 (2 mg/ml) and Matrigel | Sakar et al., |
| Sylgard-based 35 mm culture dish coated with laminin | Excitability and contractile properties of muscle engineered from co-cultured primary cells | Silk sutures coated with 50 μg/ml laminin | Co-culture of primary myogenic precursors, fibroblasts and all related cell types | Laminin base layer (1 μ g/cm2) | Dennis and Kosnik, |
| Sylgard-coated 35 mm culture dish coated with laminin | Skeletal muscle construct from C2C12 myoblasts; AIM-V media | Silk sutures | C2C12 myoblasts AIM-V serum-free medium; 0.02 × 106 cells / dish | Laminin base layer (2 μg/ml) Laminin top layer (10 μg/ml) | Fujita et al., |
The chambers employed for three-dimensional culture of skeletal muscle may be divided into three main categories: Cast chambers such as the uncomplicated silicon tubing model (A), Photolithographic moulds and micro-patterned wells (B), and Scaffold-free confluent monolayers (C).
These are fitted into the wells of standard culture plates.
The combination of hydrogel components as well as cell type, number and volume seeded per well vary considerably between published methods, and are summarized. The concentration of Matrigel is 10% (v/v) unless otherwise indicated.
Figure 1Details on simple silicone tube chamber construction and hydrogel-cell preparation. (A) Biological grade silicone tubing is cut to fit the diameter of the well; the tube is then cut lengthwise in half (1). Surgical grade stainless steel pins are inserted through the silicone wall at predefined distances from each other (2). The silicone tube is secured in place within the well with Sylgard 182 to form a chamber (3). The hydrogel-cell suspension is pipetted into the silicone chamber around the pins (4) and the well is flooded with growth media once the gel construct has set (5). (B) Calculations for preparation of the hydrogel-cell mixture (Ratio of 6:1). (C) A multi-well plate containing a hydrogel-C2C12 mix seeded in silicone tube chambers (arrows indicate pins positioned 4 mm apart).
Figure 2Successful generation of mouse and human skeletal muscle constructs using the simple silicone chamber system. (A) When seeded in a matrix of collagen 1 and Matrigel (14%), mouse C2C12 cells formed tissue (day 7 in differentiation media) between pins placed 4 mm apart. (B) When seeded in a matrix of collagen 1 and Matrigel (14%), mouse C2C12 cells formed tissue (day 3 in differentiation media) between pins placed 8 mm apart. (C) When seeded in a matrix of collagen 1 and Matrigel (14%), human skeletal muscle (HSKM) cells formed tissue (day 3 in differentiation media) between pins placed 4 mm apart. (D) After 12 days in differentiation media, actin fibers stained with TRITC-phalloidin and were clearly visible in the differentiated mouse C2C12 myotubes. Nuclei were stained with Hoechst (scale bar = 50 μm). (E) After 15 days in differentiation media, elongated myotubes were aligned and contained desmin, an intermediate filament required for myotube contractile function (scale bar = 50 μm). (F) Thin sections of resin-embedded C2C12 myoblasts culture for 15 days in differentiation media showed the formation of multi-nucleated (arrows) myotubes (scale bar = 20 μm).