| Literature DB >> 28540307 |
Anna Gilpin1, Yong Yang1.
Abstract
As the gap between donors and patients in need of an organ transplant continues to widen, research in regenerative medicine seeks to provide alternative strategies for treatment. One of the most promising techniques for tissue and organ regeneration is decellularization, in which the extracellular matrix (ECM) is isolated from its native cells and genetic material in order to produce a natural scaffold. The ECM, which ideally retains its inherent structural, biochemical, and biomechanical cues, can then be recellularized to produce a functional tissue or organ. While decellularization can be accomplished using chemical and enzymatic, physical, or combinative methods, each strategy has both benefits and drawbacks. The focus of this review is to compare the advantages and disadvantages of these methods in terms of their ability to retain desired ECM characteristics for particular tissues and organs. Additionally, a few applications of constructs engineered using decellularized cell sheets, tissues, and whole organs are discussed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28540307 PMCID: PMC5429943 DOI: 10.1155/2017/9831534
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Process of engineering tissues using decellularized ECM.
Summary of decellularization agents and techniques.
| Category | Agents and techniques | Mechanism/description | Significant effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chemical and enzymatic | (1) |
| ||
| Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) | (i) Ionic | (i) Cytotoxic: requires extensive wash process | [ | |
| (ii) Alters microstructure (i.e., collagen fibers) | [ | |||
| Triton X-100 | (i) Nonionic | (i) Less damaging to structure of tissue than ionic surfactants | [ | |
| (ii) Commonly used with ammonium hydroxide | ||||
| Sodium deoxycholate (SD) | (i) Ionic | (i) Causes agglutination of DNA when used without DNase | [ | |
| (ii) Commonly used with DNase | (ii) Remnant DNA fragments | [ | ||
| CHAPS | (i) Zwitterionic | (i) Maintains structural ECM proteins | [ | |
| (ii) Remnant cytoplasmic proteins | [ | |||
| (iii) Maintains ultrastructure | [ | |||
| (2) |
| |||
| Peracetic acid | (i) Highly corrosive | (i) Insufficient cell removal | [ | |
| (ii) Oftentimes used for sterilization | (ii) Increases stiffness of ECM | [ | ||
| Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) | (i) Commonly used with trypsin | (i) Decreases salt- and acid-soluble ECM proteins | [ | |
| Reversible alkaline swelling | (i) Induces negative charge on collagen to cause swelling | (i) Alters mechanical properties | [ | |
| (ii) Used with tridecyl alcohol ethoxylate | ||||
| (3) |
| |||
| Trypsin | (i) Breaks cell-matrix adhesions | |||
| (ii) Commonly used with EDTA | ||||
| Deoxyribonuclease (DNase) | (i) Breaks down DNA fragments | |||
| (ii) Commonly used with SD | ||||
| Ribonuclease (RNase) | (i) Breaks down RNA fragments | |||
|
| ||||
| Mechanical | High hydrostatic pressure (HHP) | (i) Pressures greater than 600 MPa applied to lyse cells | (i) Remnant DNA fragments | [ |
| (ii) Denatures ECM proteins | [ | |||
| Supercritical carbon dioxide | (i) Applies CO2 at pressures above 7.40 MPa and temperatures above 31.1°C | (i) Requires entrainer to remove polar phospholipid membrane | [ | |
| (ii) Maintains ECM proteins & mechanical properties | [ | |||
| Freeze-thaw | (i) Alternate between freezing temperatures (−80°C) and biological temperatures (~37°C) | (i) Maintains ECM proteins & mechanical properties | [ | |
| (ii) Remnant DNA | [ | |||
Summary of ECM type treated using main decellularization strategies.
| Agents and techniques | Cell sheet/tissue/organ |
|---|---|
| SDS | Fibroblast cell sheet [ |
| Triton X-100 | Bovine pericardium [ |
| SD/DNase | Porcine blood vessel [ |
| CHAPS | Rat lung [ |
| Peracetic acid | Porcine SIS [ |
| EDTA/trypsin | Porcine pulmonary valve [ |
| Freeze-thaw | Fibroblast cell sheet [ |
| High hydrostatic pressure | Porcine cornea [ |