Literature DB >> 27575985

A step towards clinical application of acellular matrix: A clue from macrophage polarization.

Astgik Petrosyan1, Stefano Da Sacco1, Nikita Tripuraneni1, Ursula Kreuser2, Maria Lavarreda-Pearce1, Riccardo Tamburrini3, Roger E De Filippo1, Giuseppe Orlando3, Paolo Cravedi4, Laura Perin5.   

Abstract

The outcome of tissue engineered organ transplants depends on the capacity of the biomaterial to promote a pro-healing response once implanted in vivo. Multiple studies, including ours, have demonstrated the possibility of using the extracellular matrix (ECM) of animal organs as platform for tissue engineering and more recently, discarded human organs have also been proposed as scaffold source. In contrast to artificial biomaterials, natural ECM has the advantage of undergoing continuous remodeling which allows adaptation to diverse conditions. It is known that natural matrices present diverse immune properties when compared to artificial biomaterials. However, how these properties compare between diseased and healthy ECM and artificial scaffolds has not yet been defined. To answer this question, we used decellularized renal ECM derived from WT mice and from mice affected by Alport Syndrome at different time-points of disease progression as a model of renal failure with extensive fibrosis. We characterized the morphology and composition of these ECMs and compared their in vitro effects on macrophage activation with that of synthetic scaffolds commonly used in the clinic (collagen type I and poly-L-(lactic) acid, PLLA). We showed that ECM derived from Alport kidneys differed in fibrous protein deposition and cytokine content when compared to ECM derived from WT kidneys. Yet, both WT and Alport renal ECM induced macrophage differentiation mainly towards a reparative (M2) phenotype, while artificial biomaterials towards an inflammatory (M1) phenotype. Anti-inflammatory properties of natural ECMs were lost when homogenized, hence three-dimensional structure of ECM seems crucial for generating an anti-inflammatory response. Together, these data support the notion that natural ECM, even if derived from diseased kidneys promote a M2 protolerogenic macrophage polarization, thus providing novel insights on the applicability of ECM obtained from discarded organs as ideal scaffold for tissue engineering.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cell–matrix interactions; Macrophages; Renal extracellular matrix scaffolds (ECM)

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27575985      PMCID: PMC6717660          DOI: 10.1016/j.matbio.2016.08.009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Matrix Biol        ISSN: 0945-053X            Impact factor:   11.583


  58 in total

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