| Literature DB >> 33007935 |
Gregory Reid1,2, Fabio Magarotto3,4, Anna Marsano1,2, Michela Pozzobon3,4.
Abstract
Large-scale muscle injury in humans initiates a complex regeneration process, as not only the muscular, but also the vascular and neuro-muscular compartments have to be repaired. Conventional therapeutic strategies often fall short of reaching the desired functional outcome, due to the inherent complexity of natural skeletal muscle. Tissue engineering offers a promising alternative treatment strategy, aiming to achieve an engineered tissue close to natural tissue composition and function, able to induce long-term, functional regeneration after in vivo implantation. This review aims to summarize the latest approaches of tissue engineering skeletal muscle, with specific attention toward fabrication, neuro-angiogenesis, multicellularity and the biochemical cues that adjuvate the regeneration process.Entities:
Keywords: extracellular vesicles; growth factors; neuro-angiogenesis; skeletal muscle engineering
Year: 2020 PMID: 33007935 PMCID: PMC7711907 DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering7040118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioengineering (Basel) ISSN: 2306-5354
Figure 1Next stage approach for muscle tissue engineering. The next-generation engineered tissues for muscle regeneration should combine (1) technology cues (fabrication/topographic and physical cues), (2) multiple cell types, and (3) biochemical factors. This complex, multi-cellular and multi-factorial construct is expected to support the de novo formation of the neuro-vascular cell compartment and functional myofiber integration upon in vivo implantation (4).
Figure 2Muscle tissue engineering. (1) Tissue engineering technologies (fabrication/topographic and physical cues) are needed to generate a 3D muscle-like construct together with (2) different cell types: satellite cells, macrophages, endothelial cells, pericytes, smcs, MSCs. The 3D engineered tissue is applied to a damaged muscle (3) in order to induce muscle regeneration (4), including a functional innervated and vascularized muscle.
In vitro tissue engineering approaches
| In Vitro | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Scaffold | Model | Main Findings | References |
|
| |||
| PU | PU and dynamically perfused C2C12 | 3D Polyurethane-based soft porous scaffold functionalized with laminin and fibronectin coating allow better differentiation of C2C12. | Iberite et al. (2020) |
| PEGDA, colecistic ECM hydrogel. | Hydrogel and C2C12 | PEGDA conjugated with porcine cholecystic derived ECM, formed biocompatible hydrogel suitable for growth and maturation of C2C12. | Raj et al. (2020) |
| PLGA bioprinting | C2C12 in 3D printed scaffold. | PLGA 3D printed scaffold with C2C12 promote myogenesis and upregulate the expressions of myogenic genes (MyHC and MyOG). | Chen et al. (2019) |
| AA-MA, PLC bilayer scaffold; electrospinning | Self fold bilayer scaffold and C2C12 | A bilayer scaffold of AA-MA and aligned PLC seeded with C2C12 form aligned myotubes that contract under electrical stimuli | Apsite et al. (2020) |
| PCL bioprinting | Stretched 3D printed scaffold and C2C12 | 3D PCL scaffold used to culture C2C12 lead to better myotube formation when the scaffold is stretched. | Yang et al. (2019) |
| Gelatin | 3D gelatin scaffold and H9c2 cells | Rat H9c2 myotube formation is improved by 3D spherical gelatin bubble-based scaffold compared to 2D gelatin plating. | Mei et al. (2019) |
|
| |||
| Muscle bundles | Channelrhodopsin-2 C2C12 muscle fiber bundles and collagen HUVEC vascular structures. | Muscle fiber bundle modulate the endothelial cell sprouting. In turn myogenesis was also upregulated by interaction with the vascular cells, improving muscle contraction via angiopoetin-1/neuregulin-1 signaling. Optical stimulation of muscle tissue induces significantly more angiogenic sprouting. | Osaki et al. (2017) |
| Tetronic-tyramine hydrogel RGD | C2C12-VEGF cell sheets | The conditioned medium of VEGF-transfected C2C12 increases HUVEC sprouting in capillary formation assay. | Lee et al. (2014) |
|
| |||
| Collagen hydrogel | Collagen with differentiated C2C12. | Scaffold with myotubes shows hypertrophy and increased contractile strength after mechanical loading. | Aguilar-Agon et al. (2019) |
| Collagen and matrigel scaffold. | C2C12 and PC12 in petri dish and 3D Matrigel | Co-culture of muscular and neural cells in a 3D model improve sarcomere formation and contractile activity of differentiated C2C12 in comparison to 2D model. | Arifuzzaman et al. (2019) |
| Fibrin/Geltrex Hydrogel | Hydrogel with hMPCs and hESC derived motoneuron. | hMPC and human motoneuron co-cultured only when cultured in hydrogel and not in petri dish, show after 3 weeks an increase in myofiber diameter and neuromuscular junction functionality. Calcium imaging proved functional connectivity between motor neuron endplates and muscle fibers. | Bakooshli et al. (2019) |
| PCL mold | Aligned PCL with C2C12 and E16 Sprague Dawley motor neuron | Co-culture of C2C12 and E16 ameliorate myogenic index of C2C12 myotubes. | Das et al. (2020) |
| PCL bioprinting | hMPCs co-cultured with hNSCs in PLC contruct | 3D construct of hMPCs and hNSCs shows good cell survival, muscle differentiation and NMJs formation. | Kim et al. (2020) |
Abbreviations: AA-MA: Anisotropic methacrylated alginate fibers; PEGDA: Poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylate; PLC: Polycaprolactone; PLGA: Poly lactic-co-glycolic acid; PU: Polyurethane.
In vivo tissue engineering approaches.
| In Vivo | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Scaffold | Model | Main Findings | References |
|
| |||
| SMUs and ENC | VML in sheep | 3 months post implant, sheep treated with SMU recovered muscle mass and tetanic force production. | Novakova et al. (2020) |
| Collagen-GAG scaffold | VML in mouse | Increased hypertrophy in treated mouse 2 and 6 weeks post implant. increased running speed on a treadmill after 6 weeks compared to sham mice. | Panayi et al. (2019) |
| Dex-AT and CECS hydrogel. | VML in rat, injectable hydrogel with C2C12 and HUVEC-GFP. | 1 and 4 weeks post treatment, cells were proportionally released over time. Higher myofiber density was present in animals treated with hydrogel and cells when compared with animals treated with hydrogel alone. | Guo et al. (2019) |
| Porcine muscle ECM sponge and bioink. Descending aorta ECM bioink for bioprinting. | VML in rat and ECM with hSKMs and HUVEC. | 3 scaffolds were compared: (1) muscle ECM sponge with hSKMs (2) ECM hydrogel used as bioink with hSKMs (3) gelatin granules mold for muscle and aorta ECM seeded with hSKMs and HUVEC. 4-weeks after implant, scaffold number 3 produced better cell viability, myotube formation, angiogenesis and muscle strength recovery in respect to the other scaffolds. | Choi et al. (2019) |
| Muscle tissue plug | Rat VML. | 3 different alignment (0°,45°,90°) of muscle defect plug were implanted. The best tissue regeneration was achieved with aligned muscle plug (0°): increased expression of myogenic genes 2 weeks after implant; a peak of tetanic torque force and reduced collagen deposition after 12 weeks. | Kim et al. (2020) |
| Subcutaneous implant of PCL fibers | Rat VML, sciatic nerve and abdominal artery defects. | In vivo implant of depleted PCL ECM allows: (1) muscle tissue regeneration with reduction of collagen deposition; (2) good axon diameter, thickness of myelin sheets; (3) vascular regeneration with good morphology of vascular microchannels | Zhu et al. (2019) |
| Fibrinogen, gelatin, hyaluronic acid and glycerol bioink in PCL pillar | VML in rat and bioink with hMPCs | 8-weeks post implant, muscle strength, vascularization and number of NMJs were higher in comparison with rats treated with bioink without cells (printed and non-printed). | Kim et al. (2018) |
| PCL bioprinting | VML in rat and scaffold with hMPCs co-cultured with hNSCs. | Analysis were performed at 4 and 8 weeks. Pre-innervated scaffold ameliorated functional muscle regeneration, NMJs formation and reduce fibrotic tissue deposition compared to rat treated with scaffold seeded with hMPCs alone. | Kim et al. (2020) |
|
| |||
| BAM in fibrin hydrogel | Subcutaneous injection on the fascia of the | (1) BAM alone, (2) BAM co-cultured with HUVEC-GFP and (3) BAM with HUVEC in fibrin hydrogel (two-stage approach). 14 days post treatment, myotube length and area, vessel length and branching were evaluated. The number 3 construct gave better results. | Gholobova et al. (2020) |
| PLLA and PLGA scaffold | Abdominal wall defect in mouse and PLLA/PLGA with satellite and lung microvascular cells. | Scaffolds with satellite cells alone and scaffolds with both cell types were implanted in immunocompetent and immunocompromised mice. 18 days post implantation, the pre-vascularized scaffold inserted in immunocompromised mice showed better neovascularization and myogenesis in respect to the immunocompetent. | Perry et al. (2019) |
| Fibrinogen hydrogel | VML in rat and hydrogel with BMDMs. | After 15 days, implantation of gel with muscle cells+BMDMs shows increased vascularization, muscle area and muscle strength compared with implantation of gel containing only muscle cells. | Juhas et al. (2018) |
| Tetronic-tyramine hydrogel RGD | C2C12-VEGF cell sheets | Ischemic model with myoblasts sheets: promoted the formation of capillaries and arterioles in ischemic muscles, attenuated the muscle necrosis and fibrosis progressed by ischemia, and prevented ischemic limb loss. | Lee et al. (2014) |
Abbreviations: BAM: Bio Artificial Muscle with human skeletal muscle cells; BMDMs: Bone Marrow Derived Macrophages; CECS: N-carboxyethyl chitosan; Dex-AT: Dextran-graft-aniline tetramer-graft-4; ENC: Engineered Neural Conduit; GAG: Glycosaminoglycans; hMPCs: human Muscle Precursor Cells; hNSCs: human Neural Stem Cells; hSKMs: human Skeletal Muscle Cells; NMJs: Neuromuscular Junction; PLGA: Poly Lactic-co-Glycolic Acid; PLLA: Poly L-Lactic Acid; SMUs: Small Muscle Units.
Figure 3Biochemical stimuli to enhance muscle regeneration. (1) Growth factors, cytokines, small molecules, miRNA are biofactors known to improve the regeneration process (3) of a damaged muscle (2). The biofactors can be delivered to a damaged muscle by (a) direct injection or (b) previous embedding in a scaffold. The factors can be also vehicled by plasmid or virus to enhance the release and possibly achieve innervated and vascularized muscle.