| Literature DB >> 25641644 |
Xiaoya Wang1, Wanyin Zhai2, Chengtie Wu3, Bing Ma3, Jiamin Zhang4, Hongfeng Zhang5, Ziyan Zhu4, Jiang Chang6.
Abstract
Elastin, a main component of decellularized extracellular matrices and elastin-containing materials, has been used for tissue engineering applications due to their excellent biocompatibility. However, elastin is easily calcified, leading to the decrease of life span for elastin-based substitutes. How to inhibit the calcification of elastin-based scaffolds, but maintain their good biocompatibility, still remains significantly challenging. Procyanidins (PC) are a type of natural polyphenols with crosslinking ability. To investigate whether pure elastin could be crosslinked by PC with anti-calcification effect, PC was first used to crosslink aortic elastin. Results show that PC can crosslink elastin and effectively inhibit elastin-initiated calcification. Further experiments reveal the possible mechanisms for the anti-calcification of PC crosslinking including (1) inhibiting inflammation cell attachment, and secretion of inflammatory factors such as MMPs and TNF-α, (2) preventing elastin degradation by elastase, and (3) direct inhibition of mineral nucleation in elastin. Moreover, the PC-crosslinked aortic elastin maintains natural structure with high pore volume (1111 μL/g), large pore size (10-300 μm) and high porosity (75.1%) which facilitates recellularization of scaffolds in vivo, and displays excellent hemocompatibility, anti-thrombus and anti-inflammatory potential. The advantages of PC-crosslinked porous aortic elastin suggested that it can serve as a promising scaffold for tissue engineering.Entities:
Keywords: Calcification; Crosslinking; Elastin; Procyanidins; Tissue engineering scaffold
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25641644 DOI: 10.1016/j.actbio.2015.01.028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Biomater ISSN: 1742-7061 Impact factor: 8.947