| Literature DB >> 26098225 |
Hiroaki Taketa1, Gulsan Ara Sathi1, Mahmoud Farahat1, Kazi Anisur Rahman1, Takayoshi Sakai2, Yoshiaki Hirano3, Takuo Kuboki1, Yasuhiro Torii1, Takuya Matsumoto1.
Abstract
In vitro fabricated biological tissue would be a valuable tool to screen newly synthesized drugs or understand the tissue development process. Several studies have attempted to fabricate biological tissue in vitro. However, controlling the growth and morphology of the fabricated tissue remains a challenge. Therefore, new techniques are required to modulate tissue growth. RGD (arginine-glycine-aspartic acid), which is an integrin-binding domain of fibronectin, has been found to enhance cell adhesion and survival; it has been used to modify substrates for in vitro cell culture studies or used as tissue engineering scaffolds. In addition, this study shows novel functions of the RGD peptide, which enhances tissue growth and modulates tissue morphology in vitro. When an isolated submandibular gland (SMG) was cultured on an RGD-modified alginate hydrogel sheet, SMG growth including bud expansion and cleft formation was dramatically enhanced. Furthermore, we prepared small RGD-modified alginate beads and placed them on the growing SMG tissue. These RGD-modified beads successfully induced cleft formation at the bead position, guiding the desired SMG morphology. Thus, this RGD-modified material might be a promising tool to modulate tissue growth and morphology in vitro for biological tissue fabrication.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26098225 PMCID: PMC4476418 DOI: 10.1038/srep11468
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1a) Schematic illustration of submandibular gland tissue (SMG) culture on hydrogel. b,c) SMG cultured on hydrogel sheets modified by introducing various RGD concentrations (0–0.18 mol/l), and SMG cultured on a tissue culture dish without any hydrogel substrate as a negative control (Bar = 50 μm). A stiffer gel sheet normally attenuates SMG growth, but the SMG growth was enhanced when RGD was introduced. The SMG growth changed in accordance with the introduced amount of RGD (*p < 0.05). Whereas, SMG was completely dissociated when cultured on the tissue culture dish.
Figure 2a) Immunofluorescent staining of FGF7 and FGF10 expressed in SMG tissue cultured for 24 hours on hydrogel sheets with and without RGD modification (Red: anti-FGF7/anti-FGF10, Green: PNA, Bar = 100 μm). b) Western blotting results of FGF7/FGF10 expression in SMG tissue cultured for 72 hours. Higher expression of both proteins was detected in SMG cultured on RGD modified gel sheet. ß-actin used as control. c) Addition of anti-FGF7 or anti-FGF10 clearly attenuates SMG growth cultured on RGD modified gel sheet in accordance with the amount of antibodies. (*p < 0.05).
Figure 3a) Neural growth in SMG tissue cultured for 72 hours on hydrogel sheets with and without RGD modification. Neural expansion is enhanced on the RGD-modified sheet (Red: anti-βIII tubulin, Green: PNA, Bar = 100 μm). b) Neural cell culture for 7 days on hydrogel sheets with and without RGD modification. Cells on the RGD-modified sheet show better neurite growth than do cells on the sheet without RGD modification (Bar = 20 μm). d) Addition of anti-neurturin clearly attenuates SMG growth according to the amount of antibody. (*p < 0.05).
Figure 4a) SMG tissue cultured with RGD modified hydrogel beads of different sizes. The ratio of cleft formation changed in accordance with the bead size (Bar = 100 μm). b) For beads of any size, the rate of successful cleft formation was higher for RGD-modified beads. c) The beads placed on SMG tissue triggered cleft formation locally (Bar = 50 μm). d) Ki67 staining indicated the proliferation of both epithelial and mesenchymal cells around the beads (Bar = 50 μm). (*p < 0.05).