| Literature DB >> 32154210 |
Anita F Quigley1,2,3, Rhys Cornock1, Tharun Mysore4, Javad Foroughi1, Magdalena Kita1,2, Joselito M Razal5, Jeremy Crook1,6,7, Simon E Moulton8, Gordon G Wallace1, Robert M I Kapsa1,2,3.
Abstract
Engineering of 3D regenerative skeletal muscle tissue constructs (skMTCs) using hydrogels containing muscle precursor cells (MPCs) is of potential benefit for repairing Volumetric Muscle Loss (VML) arising from trauma (e.g., road/industrial accident, war injury) or for restoration of functional muscle mass in disease (e.g., Muscular Dystrophy, muscle atrophy). Additive Biofabrication (AdBiofab) technologies make possible fabrication of 3D regenerative skMTCs that can be tailored to specific delivery requirements of VML or functional muscle restoration. Whilst 3D printing is useful for printing constructs of many tissue types, the necessity of a balanced compromise between cell type, required construct size and material/fabrication process cyto-compatibility can make the choice of 3D printing a secondary alternative to other biofabrication methods such as wet-spinning. Alternatively, wet-spinning is more amenable to formation of fibers rather than (small) layered 3D-Printed constructs. This study describes the fabrication of biosynthetic alginate fibers containing MPCs and their use for delivery of dystrophin-expressing cells to dystrophic muscle in the mdx mouse model of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) compared to poly(DL-lactic-co-glycolic acid) copolymer (PLA:PLGA) topically-seeded with myoblasts. In addition, this study introduces a novel method by which to create 3D layered wet-spun alginate skMTCs for bulk mass delivery of MPCs to VML lesions. As such, this work introduces the concept of "Trojan Horse" Fiber MTCs (TH-fMTCs) and 3d Mesh-MTCs (TH-mMTCs) for delivery of regenerative MPCs to diseased and damaged muscle, respectively.Entities:
Keywords: alginate fibers; biosynthetic muscle scaffold; muscle engineering; myoblasts; wet-spun
Year: 2020 PMID: 32154210 PMCID: PMC7044405 DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2020.00018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Chem ISSN: 2296-2646 Impact factor: 5.221
Figure 1Wet-Spinning BioSynthetic Myoblast Fibers (PLGA and Alginate): Comparison of native Muscle, PLGA and “Trojan Horse” Alginate Fibers. (A) Apparatus. (B) Line Schematic. (C) Native Muscle Fibers and myoblasts immunostained with Desmin: early culture. (D) PLGA Fibers with myoblasts and myotubes attached externally (immunostained with Desmin). (E) SEM of PLGA fiber with myotubes attached. Myoblasts on the PLGA fibers were seen to spread and differentiate longitudinally without evidence of retained proliferative capacity under differentiation conditions in vitro. (F) 1% Alg Trojan Horse Fibers with 2 × 107 myoblasts/ml (longitudinal and cross sections inset, Hematoxylin and Eosin). Unless otherwise specified, size calibration markers are 100 μm.
Figure 2Optimization of BioSynthetic Alginate/Myoblast Trojan Horse Constructs for Implantation: Alg Fibers with: (A) 1 × 107 cells/ml; (B) 2 × 107 Cells/ml; (C) 3 × 107 Cells/ml; (D) Controlled and consistent fiber diameter regardless of cell numbers or alginate concentration was achieved, with no statistical differences evident between syntheses (t-test). (E) Cell Death (%Dead Cells) was evaluated in 1 and 2% alginate fibers loaded with 1, 2, and 3 × 107 Cells/ml to establish optimal alginate/cell combination as evident by post-spun cell viability. A maximum of ~15% of cells died as a result of wet-spinning in 1 and 2% alginate loaded with 3 × 107 Cells/ml and in biosynthetic fiber constructs of 2% alginate loaded with 2 × 107 Cells/ml. This evaluation showed that 1% Alg/2 × 107 Cells/ml resulted in the least numbers of cells entering programmed cell death as a result of the wet-spinning process. Statistical-significance markers for student t statistics shown are as follows: *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.005. (F) Cells disperse inside the BioSynthetic 1% Alginate/2 × 107 myoblasts/ml Trojan Horse constructs in vitro, where they (G) Proliferate freely until they (H) Migrate from the constructs into the surrounding environment and (I–K) Differentiate normally according to biological cues within the environment. This biological behavior in vitro models the cell delivery dynamic expected when the cell-loaded alginate-based Trojan Horse constructs are implanted into muscle. Unless otherwise specified, size calibration bars are 100 μm. Optimization of PLGA/Cell fibers was limited to seeding cells on fibers at optimal ex vivo cell plating density immediately prior to implantation. Unless otherwise specified, size calibration bars are 100 μm.
Figure 3Biosynthetic PLGA and alginate fiber and cell bolus implantation into dystrophic and damaged mouse muscle. (A) Experimental schematic for implantation of biosynthetic cell/fiber constructs containing dystrophin and β-Galactosidase-expressing C57BL10/β-Gal mouse myoblasts into mdx and C57BL10J mouse muscle. (B) Biosynthetic 1% Alginate Trojan Horse Fibers loaded with β-Gal transgenic C57BL10/β-Gal myoblasts (3 × 106 c/ml) were transplanted into dystrophic C57BL10-mdx mouse (muscular dystrophy) muscle showed that donor cells that migrated into the surrounding muscle expressed both (blue) β-Gal (C) As well as (green) dystrophin (D) In the dystrophic mdx host muscle. (E) This behavior also occurred in non-dystrophic muscle, with β-Gal-positive cells evident within the Trojan Horse construct and in fibers (Eosin/β-Gal-stained) of the surrounding muscle. (F) Myoblasts implanted on PLGA fibers did not survive and the PLGA fibers were still intact within the recipient muscle at 4 weeks post-implantation, with the PLGA fibers remaining hard (H&E stain). This was evident even at 3 months post implant. (G) Alginate Trojan Horse constructs yielded demonstrably more effective re-modeling of recipient dystrophic muscle with dystrophin-expressing cells (p < 0.05; t) than either cell bolus or cells implanted on PLGA fibers. PLGA fibers implanted with cells attached yielded no donor cells engrafted into the host muscle tissue at this timepoint (data not shown) and were discounted from further consideration as a cell delivery vehicle. Unless otherwise specified, size calibration bars are 100 μm.
Figure 43D Matrix of BioSynthetic (Alg/Myoblast) Fibers. (A) Line schematic of layer by layer (LbL) deposition of fibers to form a 3D cell-containing mat. The process can be repeated additively with 90° rotation of each subsequent deposition prior to collection until the required number of layers are attained. Linearity of biosynthetic alginate/myoblast fibers can be maintained by alternating layers of just alginate (no cells) in between layers of alginate/myoblast fibers. (B) A 1 cm × 1 cm × 0.625 mm 3D 5-layer matrix scaffold of (1% alginate/2 × 107 per ml myoblast) fibers prepared by LbL fiber deposition as described in (A). (B′) The size of the entire 3D mesh scaffold shown against a millimeter scale. (B″) High resolution image of the mesh muscle tissue constructs, with cells located within the individual fibers.