The prevalence of cardiovascular disease and the limited availability of suitable autologous transplant vessels for coronary and peripheral bypass surgeries is a significant clinical problem. A great deal of progress has been made over recent years to develop biodegradable materials with the potential to remodel and regenerate vascular tissues. However, the creation of functional biological scaffolds capable of withstanding vascular stress within a clinically relevant time frame has proved to be a challenging proposition. As an alternative approach, we report the use of a multilaminate rolling approach using the human amnion to generate a tubular construct for blood vessel regeneration. The human amniotic membrane was decellularized by agitation in 0.03% (w/v) sodium dodecyl sulfate to generate an immune compliant material. The adhesion of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (EC) and human vascular smooth muscle cells (SMC) was assessed to determine initial binding and biocompatibility (monocultures). Extended cultures were either assessed as flat membranes, or rolled to form concentric multilayered conduits. Results showed positive EC adhesion and a progressive repopulation by SMC. Functional changes in SMC gene expression and the constructs' bulk mechanical properties were concomitant with vessel remodeling as assessed over a 40-day culture period. A significant advantage with this approach is the ability to rapidly produce a cell-dense construct with an extracellular matrix similar in architecture and composition to natural vessels. The capacity to control physical parameters such as vessel diameter, wall thickness, shape, and length are critical to match vessel compliance and tailor vessel specifications to distinct anatomical locations. As such, this approach opens new avenues in a range of tissue regenerative applications that may have a much wider clinical impact.
At approximately 50 μm thin, the human amniotic membrane (hAM) has been shown to be a versatile biomaterial with applications ranging from ocular transplants to skin and nerve regeneration. These investigations describe laminating layers of the hAM into a multilayered, conformation creating a thicker, more robust biomaterial for applications requiring more supportive structures. Amniotic membranes were decellularized using 4 M NaCl and prepared as either flat single-layered sheets or rolled into concentric five-layered configurations. Constructs were seeded with human vascular smooth muscle cells and cultured over 40 days to quantify biological and mechanical changes that occurred during early remodeling events. By day 40 single-layered constructs displayed a decreasing trend in cellular densities and glycosaminoglycan (GAG) concentration, comparative to multilayered constructs with increasing cell densities (from 9.1 to 32 × 106 cells/g) and GAG concentrations (from 6.07 to 17.4 mg/g). Oxygen diffusion was calculated and found to be sufficient to maintain cell populations through the constructs full thickness. Although an overall decrease in the modulus of elasticity was noted, the modulus in the failure range of rolled constructs stabilized at values 25 times higher than single-layered constructs. Rolled constructs typically displayed an upregulation of contractile and matrix remodeling markers (α-actin, SM22 and type 1 collagen, MMP-2 respectively) indicating biological adaptation. Considerable design flexibility can be achieved by varying the number of scaffold layers, allowing the possibility of tuning the constructs physical dimensions, shape and tensile properties to suit specific targeted vascular locations.
Background Herein we describe a small-diameter vascular graft constructed from rolled human amniotic membrane (hAM), with in vitro evaluation and subsequent in vivo assessment of its mechanical and initial biological viability in the early post-implantation period. This approach for graft construction allows for customization of graft dimensions, with wide-ranging potential clinical applicability as a non-autologous, allogeneic, cell-free graft material. Methods and Results Acellular hAM were rolled into layered conduits (3.2-mm diameter) that were bound with fibrin and lyophilized. In vitro analysis Constructs were seeded with human smooth muscle cells (SMC) and cultured under controlled arterial hemodynamic conditions. SMC were shown to adhere to, proliferate within, and remodel the scaffold over a four-week culture period. At the end of the culture period, there was histologic and biomechanical evidence of graft wall layer coalescence. In vivo analysis The acellular hAM conduits were surgically implanted as arterial interposition grafts into the carotid arteries of immunocompetent rabbits. Grafts demonstrated patency over four weeks (n=3) with no hyperacute rejection or thrombotic occlusion. Explants displayed histologic evidence of active cellular remodeling, with endogenous cell repopulation of the graft wall concurrent with degradation of initial graft material. Cells were shown to align circumferentially to resemble a vascular medial layer. Conclusions The vascular grafts were shown to provide a supportive scaffold allowing for cellular infiltration and remodeling by host cell populations in vivo. Using this approach, “off-the-shelf” vascular grafts can be created with specified diameters and wall thicknesses to satisfy specific anatomical requirements in diverse patient populations.
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