| Literature DB >> 29853910 |
Adegbenro Omotuyi John Fakoya1, David Adeiza Otohinoyi2, Joshua Yusuf2,3.
Abstract
The cardiopulmonary system is made up of the heart and the lungs, with the core function of one complementing the other. The unimpeded and optimal cycling of blood between these two systems is pivotal to the overall function of the entire human body. Although the function of the cardiopulmonary system appears uncomplicated, the tissues that make up this system are undoubtedly complex. Hence, damage to this system is undesirable as its capacity to self-regenerate is quite limited. The surge in the incidence and prevalence of cardiopulmonary diseases has reached a critical state for a top-notch response as it currently tops the mortality table. Several therapies currently being utilized can only sustain chronically ailing patients for a short period while they are awaiting a possible transplant, which is also not devoid of complications. Regenerative therapeutic techniques now appear to be a potential approach to solve this conundrum posed by these poorly self-regenerating tissues. Stem cell therapy alone appears not to be sufficient to provide the desired tissue regeneration and hence the drive for biomaterials that can support its transplantation and translation, providing not only physical support to seeded cells but also chemical and physiological cues to the cells to facilitate tissue regeneration. The cardiac and pulmonary systems, although literarily seen as just being functionally and spatially cooperative, as shown by their diverse and dissimilar adult cellular and tissue composition has been proven to share some common embryological codevelopment. However, necessitating their consideration for separate review is the immense adult architectural difference in these systems. This review also looks at details on new biological and synthetic biomaterials, tissue engineering, nanotechnology, and organ decellularization for cardiopulmonary regenerative therapies.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29853910 PMCID: PMC5949153 DOI: 10.1155/2018/3123961
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Int Impact factor: 5.443
Figure 1Classification of current biomaterials in cardiovascular regeneration.
Classifications of natural and synthetic biomaterials used in cardiac regeneration.
| Biomaterials | Experimental studies | References | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Classification | Subclassification | In vitro | In vivo | Clinical trials | |
| Natural biomaterials: polysaccharide-derived | Chitosan | Yang et al. (2009): chitosan improved silk fibroin effect on rat MSC. Liu et al. (2013): chitosan improved the differentiation of ADSC. | Chi et al. (2013): BASC on chitosan improved overall cardiac function in MI rat models. | None reported. | [ |
| Wang et al. (2010): chitosan improved the function of bFGF on cardiac function. | |||||
| Alginate | Wang et al. (2012): hydrogels from alginate can enhance the growth of stem cells. | Leor et al. (2000): RFCC in alginate scaffolds supported neovascularization in rat models. | None reported. | [ | |
| Yeghiazarians et al. (2012): hESC with inhibited p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase on alginate scaffolds improved cardiac function with no immune response. | |||||
| Agarose | Dahlmann et al. (2013): agarose microwells supported the differentiation of pluripotent stem cells to cardiomyocytes. | None reported. | [ | ||
| Hyaluronic acid | Yang et al. (2010): HA combined with SF seeded with rat MSCs enhanced cardiac gene expression. | Yoon et al. (2016): HA modified with polyethylene glycol-thiol reduced infarct size and promoted neovascularization in a rat model. | None reported. | [ | |
| Göv et al. (2016): HA and gelatin enhanced the differentiation of human ADSC to CM. | |||||
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| Natural biomaterials: protein-derived | Collagen | Yu et al. (2017): type I collagen with carbon nanotubes boosted cardiac cell function. | Frederick et al. (2010): collagen-gold nanocomposite coated with MSCs improved neovascularization. | None reported. | [ |
| Sun et al. (2017): collagen hydrogels and carbon nanotubes improved cell alignment. | Hsieh et al. (2016): vitronectin-collagen improved ventricular function in rat models. | ||||
| Fibrin | Ye et al. (2013): fibrin scaffolds with thymosin | Ichihara et al. (2017): epicardial placement of bone marrow MSC in fibrin scaffold should have better retention of the MSC. | Menasché et al. (2014): trials in observing the prospects of fibrin patch with hESC-CPC on individuals with heart failure. To be completed in 2018 | [ | |
| Nie et al. (2010) and Yang et al. (2012): fibrin scaffold manipulated by growth factors resembled native ECM of the human heart. | |||||
| Gelatin | Navaei et al. (2016): Ultraviolet cross-linkable gold nanorod-incorporated gelatin ethacrylate hybrid hydrogels improved cell metabolic activity. | Takehara et al. (2008): gelatin scaffold + bFGF + human cardiosphere-derived cells had a higher ejection fraction in pig MI models. | Yacoub et al. (2013) illustrated that bFGF in biodegradable gelatin hydrogel sheet implanted on the epicardium of human patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy and heart failure leads to the continuous release of bFGF. | [ | |
| Matrigel | Lam et al. (2017): matrigel enhanced the type I collagen matrix. | Zhang et al. (2017): matrigel and endothelial stem cells improved vascularization and electrical activity. | None reported. | [ | |
| Cardiogel | Chang et al. (2007): MSCs on cardiogel had better cellular expansion. | Matsuda et al. (2013): ASCs on cardiogel supported angiogenesis. | None reported. | [ | |
| Decellularized extracellular matrix | Pagano et al. (2017): CPCs thrived on healthy DECM. | Söylen et al. (2017): nonseeded decellularized homografts from human donors reduced complications with bovine jugular vein conduits. | [ | ||
| Lee et al. (2015): DECM from rat preserved and improved the survival of CM. | |||||
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| Synthetic | Mukherjee et al. (2011): poly( | Sugiura et al (2016): poly(L-lactic-co- | None reported. | [ | |
| Castilho et al. (2017): poly(hydroxymethyl glycolide-co- | Somasuntharam et al. (2013): polyketals serve as good vehicles for delivering siRNA to the MI heart. | ||||
Figure 2Application of nanotechnology in cardiomyogenesis.
The current applications of nanotechnology and tissue engineering in cardiac regeneration.
| Biomaterials | Experimental studies | References | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Classification | Subclassification | In vitro | In vivo | Clinical trials | |
| Nanotechnology | Cardiac patch production | Yamato and Okano (2004): grafting poly( | Jang et al. (2017): 3D-printed prevascularized stem cell patch with CSC and MSC improved cardiomyogenesis and neovascularization. | None reported. | [ |
| Fleischer et al. (2014): poly( | Gaebel et al. (2011): PEUU seeded with hMSC and HUVEC enhanced capillary density. | ||||
| Improving drug and therapy delivery systems | Cheng et al. (2016): 5-azacytidine delivered by FMNSs induced the differentiation of P19 cells to CM. | Change et al. (2013): the PLGA-IGF-1 NP complex showed increased IGF-1 retention, induced the phosphorylation of Akt, and provided early cardioprotection postmyocardial infarction. | None reported. | [ | |
| Oh et al. (2006); Lee and Yuk (2007): a pluronic-based micelle and liposomal system was developed and designed as a core/shell NP with a lecithin core loaded with a growth factor and a pluronic shell and showed prospect in drug delivery. | Pascual-Gil et al. (2015): intramyocardial injection of NP-liraglutide in a rat model of myocardial infarction sufficiently improved cardiac function. | ||||
| Nanoparticles and magnets: role in stem cell retention | None reported. | Vadergriff et al. (2014): ferumoxytol NPs in the presence of heparin and protamine were used to label stem cells. | None reported. | [ | |
| Zhang et al. (2012): MNBs/AdhVEGF complex showed significant improvement in left ventricular function. | |||||
| Differentiation of endometrial stem cells | Barabadi et al. (2016) showed that endometrial stem cells can be conveniently programmed into CM. | None reported. | None reported. | [ | |
| Loss-of-function studies | None reported. | Diao et al. (2015): on a zebrafish model, retinoic acid signaling was compromised by siAldh1a2 therapy. | None reported. | [ | |
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| Tissue engineering | Sidorov et al. (2017): identified the potentials of the “I-wire” platform in controlling the applied force on ECTCs while cross-examining their inactive and active mechanical and electrical characteristics. | Emmert et al. (2017): rapid fabrication of fibrous, semilunar heart valve scaffolds for the ovine model. | [ | ||
Figure 3Biomaterials in pulmonary regeneration.
Figure 4Limitations to the use of decellularized scaffold.
Classifications of biomaterials used in lung tissue regeneration.
| Biomaterials | Experimental studies | References | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Classification | Subclassification | In vitro | In vivo | Clinical trials | |
| Natural biomaterials | Albumin | Aiyelabegan et al. (2016): albumin enhanced the integration of cells and scaffolds with one another. | None reported. | None reported. | [ |
| Fibrin gel | None reported. | Mammoto et al. (2013): polymer fibrils of fibrin gels trapped VEGF and bFGF and enhanced angiogenesis in a rat model | None reported. | [ | |
| Fibrinogen/thrombin-based collagen fleece | None reported. | Ikeda et al. (2011): TC is better than suturing because it prevents vessel stricture in a canine model. | None reported. | [ | |
| Collagen-elastic fiber hydrogel | Hadjipanayi et al. (2009): influenced cellular proliferation and differentiation | None reported. | None reported. | [ | |
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| Combination of natural and synthetic biomaterials | Gelatin-modified poly( | Kosmala et al. (2016): PCL/gelatin modification did not stop human epithelial cell line NCI-H292 cells to proliferate. | None reported. | None reported. | [ |
| Electrospun nanofibers of poly( | Mahoney et al. (2016): PCL/chitosan molecular interaction helped maintain the architecture of tracheal tissue regeneration therapy. | None reported. | None reported. | [ | |
| Hyaluronic acid-g-poly (2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate (hema) copolymer | Radhakumary et al. (2011): copolymer of HA and poly(HEMA) was observed as the best choice for the “natural-synthetic polymer hybrid matrix” | None reported. | None reported. | [ | |
| 3D macroporous hydroxyethyl methacrylate-alginate-gelatin (hag) cryogel | Singh et al. (2011): combining HEMA, alginate, and gelatin improved lung tissue regeneration. | None reported. | None reported. | [ | |