Current in vivo and in vitro models fail to accurately recapitulate the human heart microenvironment for biomedical applications. This study explores the use of cardiac spheroids (CSs) to biofabricate advanced in vitro models of the human heart. CSs were created from human cardiac myocytes, fibroblasts and endothelial cells (ECs), mixed within optimal alginate/gelatin hydrogels and then bioprinted on a microelectrode plate for drug testing. Bioprinted CSs maintained their structure and viability for at least 30 d after printing. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) promoted EC branching from CSs within hydrogels. Alginate/gelatin-based hydrogels enabled spheroids fusion, which was further facilitated by addition of VEGF. Bioprinted CSs contracted spontaneously and under stimulation, allowing to record contractile and electrical signals on the microelectrode plates for industrial applications. Taken together, our findings indicate that bioprinted CSs can be used to biofabricate human heart tissues for long term in vitro testing. This has the potential to be used to study biochemical, physiological and pharmacological features of human heart tissue.
Silver nanoparticles have attracted great interests widely in medicine due to its great characteristics of antibacterial activity. In this research, the antibacterial activity and biocompatibility of a topical gel synthesized from polyvinyl alcohol, chitosan, and silver nanoparticles were studied. Hydrogels with different concentrations of silver nanoparticles (15 ppm, 30 ppm, and 60 ppm) were evaluated to compare their antibacterial activity, nanoparticles’ sizes, and in vivo behaviors. The resulted silver nanoparticles in the hydrogel were characterized by TEM showing the nanoparticles’ sizes less than 22 nm. The in vitro results prove that the antibacterial effects of all of the samples are satisfied. However, the in vivo results demonstrate the significant difference among different hydrogels in wound healing, where hydrogel with 30 ppm shows the best healing rate.
Bacterial biofilms are involved in most device-associated infections and remain a challenge for modern medicine. One major approach to addressing this problem is to prevent the formation of biofilms using novel antimicrobial materials, device surface modification or local drug delivery; however, successful preventive measures are still extremely limited. The other approach is concerned with treating biofilms that have already formed on the devices; this approach is the focus of our manuscript. Treating biofilms associated with medical devices has unique challenges due to the biofilm’s extracellular polymer substance (EPS) and the biofilm bacteria’s resistance to most conventional antimicrobial agents. The treatment is further complicated by the fact that the treatment must be suitable for applying on devices surrounded by host tissue in many cases. Nanomaterials have been extensively investigated for preventing biofilm formation on medical devices, yet their applications in treating bacterial biofilm remains to be further investigated due to the fact that treating the biofilm bacteria and destroying the EPS are much more challenging than preventing adhesion of planktonic bacteria or inhibiting their surface colonization. In this highly focused review, we examined only studies that demonstrated successful EPS destruction and biofilm bacteria killing and provided in-depth description of the nanomaterials and the biofilm eradication efficacy, followed by discussion of key issues in this topic and suggestion for future development.
Bacterial
biofilms are indicated in most medical device-associated
infections. Treating these biofilms is challenging yet critically
important for applications such as in device-retention surgeries,
which can have reinfection rates of up to 80%. This in vitro study centered around our new method of treating biofilm and preventing
reinfection. Ionic silver (Ag, in the form of silver nitrate) combined
with dopamine and a biofilm-lysing enzyme (α-amylase) were applied
to model 4-day-old Staphylococcus aureus biofilms on titanium substrates to degrade the extracellular matrix
of the biofilm and kill the biofilm bacteria. In this process, the
oxidative self-polymerization of dopamine converted Ag ions into Ag
nanoparticles that, together with the resultant self-adhering polydopamine
(PDA), formed coatings that strongly bound to the treated substrates.
Surprisingly, although these Ag/PDA coatings significantly reduced S. aureus growth in standard bacterial monoculture,
they showed much lower antimicrobial activity in coculture of the
bacteria and osteoblastic MC3T3-E1 cells in which the bacteria were
also found attached to the osteoblasts. This S. aureus– osteoblast interaction was also linked to bacterial survival
against gentamicin treatment observed in coculture. Our study thus
provided clear evidence suggesting that bacteria's interactions
with
tissue cells surrounding implants may significantly contribute to
their resistance to antimicrobial treatment.
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