| Literature DB >> 31650097 |
Matteo Solazzo, Fergal J O'Brien, Valeria Nicolosi, Michael G Monaghan.
Abstract
The human heart possesses minimal regenerative potential, which can often lead to chronic heart failure following myocardial infarction. Despite the successes of assistive support devices and pharmacological therapies, only a whole heart transplantation can sufficiently address heart failure. Engineered scaffolds, implantable patches, and injectable hydrogels are among the most promising solutions to restore cardiac function and coax regeneration; however, current biomaterials have yet to achieve ideal tissue regeneration and adequate integration due a mismatch of material physicochemical properties. Conductive fillers such as graphene, carbon nanotubes, metallic nanoparticles, and MXenes and conjugated polymers such as polyaniline, polypyrrole, and poly(3,4-ethylendioxythiophene) can possibly achieve optimal electrical conductivities for cardiac applications with appropriate suitability for tissue engineering approaches. Many studies have focused on the use of these materials in multiple fields, with promising effects on the regeneration of electrically active biological tissues such as orthopedic, neural, and cardiac tissue. In this review, we critically discuss the role of heart electrophysiology and the rationale toward the use of electroconductive biomaterials for cardiac tissue engineering. We present the emerging applications of these smart materials to create supportive platforms and discuss the crucial role that electrical stimulation has been shown to exert in maturation of cardiac progenitor cells. © Author(s).Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31650097 PMCID: PMC6795503 DOI: 10.1063/1.5116579
Source DB: PubMed Journal: APL Bioeng ISSN: 2473-2877
FIG. 1.Schematic of typical electrical conductivity values of common materials categorized as insulators, semiconductors, and metals. Top: characteristic conductivities of conjugated polymers. Bottom: average conductivities for biological organs. Values are expressed in S/cm.
FIG. 2.Representative examples of different designs for electrical stimulation bioreactors. (a) Bioreactor consisting of two parallel carbon rods, activated by a Grass stimulator and with the possibility to deliver excitation to both cell monolayers and 3D scaffolds. Reproduced with permission from Tandon et al., “Electrical stimulation systems for cardiac tissue engineering,” Nat. Protoc. 4(2), 155–173 (2009). Copyright 2009 Nature Publishing Group. (b) Bioreactor that can be combined to a standard tissue culture well plate and that can accommodate both paced and unpaced samples. Reproduced with permission from Hirt et al., J. Mol. Cell. Cardiol. 74, 151–61 (2014). Copyright 2014 Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license. (c) A dual perfusion-electrical stimulation system that can operate up to 18 systems in parallel and enables monitoring during contraction tests. Visone et al., Sci. Rep. 8, 16944 (2018). Copyright 2018 Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license. (d) Evolution of the systems in (a) and (b), where the tissue is held between two flexible pillars. Reproduced with permission from Ronaldson-Bouchard et al., “Advanced maturation of human cardiac tissue grown from pluripotent stem cells,” Nature 556, 7700 (2018). Copyright 2018 Macmillan Publishers Limited, part of Springer Nature.
FIG. 3.Smart electroactive cardiac patch designs. (a) A paintable hydrogel-patch that can be directly applied to the myocardium and drive tissue recovery. Reproduced with permission from Liang et al., “Paintable and rapidly bondable conductive hydrogels as therapeutic cardiac patches,” Adv. Mater. 30, 1704235 (2018). Copyright 2018 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim. (b) A conductive patch with auxetic design that can recapitulate the anisotropy characteristic of the myocardium. Reproduced with permission from Kapnisi et al., Adv. Funct. Mater. 28, 1800618 (2018). Copyright 2018 Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license. (c) Preseeding of CMs on a chitosan-PPy patch promoted engraftment and cardiac function improvement. Reproduced with permission from Song et al., Appl. Mater. Today 15, 87–89 (2019). Copyright 2019 Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license. (d) Chitosan-PANI film with porosity controlled via laser ablation and processed with three different pore sizes. Reproduced with permission from Hoang et al., “Porous and sutureless bioelectronic patch with retained electronic properties under cyclic stretching,” Appl. Mater. Today 15, 315–322 (2019). Copyright 2019 Elsevier Ltd.
FIG. 4.Promising injectable conductive hydrogels for in situ myocardium regeneration. (a) A chitosan-PPY hydrogel can electrically couple two separated CM populations. Reproduced with permission from Cui et al., Theranostics 8(10), 2752 (2018). Copyright 2018 Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license. (b) Adipose derived stem cells and pDNA incorporated in a conductive hydrogel, showed to improve the functionality of the heart in vivo. Reproduced with permission from Wang et al., “An injectable conductive hydrogel encapsulating plasmid DNA-eNOs and ADSCs for treating myocardial infarction,” Biomaterials 160, 69–81 (2018). Copyright 2018 Elsevier Ltd. (c) A PANI-doped hydrogel showed antioxidant effects after subcutaneous implantation. Reproduced with permission from Cui et al., “In vitro study of electroactive tetra-aniline-containing thermosensitive hydrogels for cardiac tissue engineering,” Biomacromolecules 15, 1115–1123 (2014). Copyright 2014 American Chemical Society.
Overview of electroconductive biomaterial systems employed in the field of cardiac tissue engineering and cardiac biomaterials.
| Heart models | Smart cardiac patches | Injection of hydrogels | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Electroconductive biomaterial | Fabrication | Findings | Fabrication | Findings | Fabrication | Findings |
| CNTs | GelMA hydrogels | Nanotopographic cues to cells | … | … | Gelatin-based | ↑ cTnT and Cx43 |
| Elastic polyester | ||||||
| Chitosan-based | ||||||
| PEG-poly(D,L-lactide) | ||||||
| Wet-dry electrospinning YARNS + GelMA | ↑ Cardiac feature and markers w/out electrical stimulation | |||||
| Graphene | Film: pristine graphene + collagen | ↑ Cell alignment, hES-CM maturation | GO + AuNPs + chitosan | ↑ Conduction velocity and contraction | GO with GelMA and pDNA (VEGF165) | ↑ Angiogenesis |
| Lyophilization: rGO + collagen | ↑ CM maturation | |||||
| Lyophilization: GelMA | ↑ CM maturation | GO with PEG diacrylate and adipose derived stem cells (ADSCs) | ↑ α-SMA and Cx43 | |||
| Coating PEG via CVD | ↑ cell attachment | |||||
| Metallic NPs | HEMA hydrogels | ↑ Cx43 in CMs | Collagen hydrogel + collagen fibers | ↑ Heart function, vascularization, absence of proinflammatory response | … | … |
| Chitosan hydrogels | ↑ Cardiac markers in MSCs | |||||
| PANI | Electrospinning in blend with PLGA | ↑ Cx43 expression, synchronous beating | Chitosan232 | ↑ Heart function, no induction of arrhythmias | Chitosan as smart drug carriers | Controlled inflammatory response |
| Film in PLA | ↑ Cell proliferation, development of pseudopodia | Hyaluronic acid, pDNA (eNOS), and ADSCs | ↑ Angiogenesis and tissue healing | |||
| Polyurethane | ↑ TNNT2 and Actinin alpha 4 gene w/out electrical stimulation | Microablation of the chitosan film | Auxetic design, mechanical and electrical anisotropy | Cyclodextrin | ↓ Inflammatory response, fibroblastic capsule | |
| Electrospinning in blend with polyethersulfone | ↑ NKX2.5, GATA4, NPPA, and TNNT2 | |||||
| PPy | Film in PCL | ↑ Ca2+ propagation velocity | Paintable adhesive dopamine blend | ↑ Heart function and vascularization | Chitosan | Electrical coupling |
| Electrospinning in blend with PCL | ↑ Cellular alignment | Chitosan gel foam | ↑ Conduction velocity absence of arrhythmias | |||
| Coating on PLGA electrospun scaffold | ↑ Actinin, NKX2.5, GATA4, Myh6; actuation ability | |||||
| PEDOT | Collagen/alginate hydrogel | ↑ Increased sarcomeric length; faster and wider contraction | … | … | … | … |