| Literature DB >> 24955633 |
Steven G Wise1, Anna Waterhouse2, Praveesuda Michael3, Martin K C Ng4.
Abstract
All vascular implants, including stents, heart valves and graft materials exhibit suboptimal biocompatibility that significantly reduces their clinical efficacy. A range of biomolecules in the subendothelial space have been shown to play critical roles in local regulation of thrombosis, endothelial growth and smooth muscle cell proliferation, making these attractive candidates for modulation of vascular device biointegration. However, classically used biomaterial coatings, such as fibronectin and laminin, modulate only one of these components; enhancing endothelial cell attachment, but also activating platelets and triggering thrombosis. This review examines a subset of extracellular matrix molecules that have demonstrated multi-faceted vascular compatibility and accordingly are promising candidates to improve the biointegration of vascular biomaterials.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 24955633 PMCID: PMC4031001 DOI: 10.3390/jfb3030569
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Funct Biomater ISSN: 2079-4983
Figure 1The multiple facets of vascular biointegration: (a) A healthy vessel is characterized by a complete monolayer of endothelial cells (ECs), quiescent smooth muscle cells (SMCs) and hemostasis; (b) In disease, the endothelium is compromised, SMCs hyper-proliferate and the clotting cascade is triggered; (c) An ideal implanted device will simultaneously enhance EC regrowth, block SMC proliferation and inhibit thrombus formation.
Figure 2Candidate biomolecules and their relative locations in the vessel wall, highlighting their proximity to ECs, SMCs and the vessel lumen.
Summary of vascular biological effects of biomolecule candidates.
| Candidate | Effect on ECs | Effect on SMCs | Blood Compatibility | Translation to Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Proliferation, | Proliferation, | Not yet tested | Enhanced fibroblast attachment to PU scaffold |
|
| Attachment | Proliferation, | Not yet tested | No translation |
|
| Attachment, proliferation, | Proliferation, | Hemocompatible; minimal activation of platelets | Improves EC binding, growth on steel; reduces thrombogenicity of catheters, ePTFE grafts |
|
| Proliferation, | Proliferation, hyperplasia (rat model) | Direct inhibition of thrombosis | Less thrombus present on ePTFE grafts, greater ECs; Stents show less neointima |