| Literature DB >> 35500770 |
Jing Du1, Xueyan Hu1, Ya Su1, Tuo Wei1, Zeren Jiao2, Tianqing Liu1, Hong Wang3, Yi Nie4, Xiangqin Li5, Kedong Song6.
Abstract
Cardiovascular diseases and vascular trauma can be commonly found in the population. Scholars worldwide hope to develop small-diameter vascular grafts that can replace autologous vessels for clinical use. Decellularized blood vessels can retain the original morphology, structure, and physical properties of blood vessels, which is conducive to cell growth, proliferation, and differentiation. In this study, porcine coronary arteries (PCAs) were decellularized to prepare decellularized porcine coronary artery (DPCA), and bilayer hybrid scaffolds were prepared by coating gelatin and sodium alginate mixed hydrogel of seven different proportions and combined with mouse fibroblasts (L929 cells) to study the construction of tissue engineering vessels in vitro. The obtained bilayer hybrid scaffolds were 3-7 cm in length, 5 mm in external diameter, and 1 mm in average wall thickness. All seven bilayer hybrid scaffolds showed good biocompatibility after cell inoculation. Compared with 2D culture, cells on 3D scaffolds grew relatively slowly in the first 4 days, and the number of cells proliferated rapidly at 7 days. In the same culture days, different concentrations of hydrogel also had an impact on cell proliferation. With the increase of hydrogel content, cells on the 3D scaffold formed cell colonies faster. The results showed that the scaffold had good biocompatibility and could meet the needs of artificial blood vessel construction.Entities:
Keywords: Bilayer scaffolds construct; Decellularized porcine coronary artery; Fibroblasts; Gelatin/sodium alginate; Tissue engineered blood vessels
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35500770 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2022.04.188
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Biol Macromol ISSN: 0141-8130 Impact factor: 6.953