Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built...

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Tissue Engineering • Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues • Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize into tissue and which cells are responsive? Assumption: Employment of natural biology of the system will allow for greater success

Transcript of Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built...

Page 1: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Tissue Engineering

• Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues• Challenge: Understand how tissues

are built in-vivoi.e. what instructions do cells need to

organize into tissue and which cells are responsive?

Assumption: Employment of natural biology of the system will allow for greater success

Page 2: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Tissue Engineering Triad

Prosthesis

Scaffold

Cells Signals

e.g. gels, foams, fibers, membranes, ECM components

e.g. adult, ES cells, autogeneous, allogenic, engineered cells, migration of cells into scaffold

e.g. growth factors, ascorbic acid, mechanical stimuli

Page 3: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Cell-Based Therapy: Some Questions to be

Addressed

What type of cell? Pre-cursor vs. differentiated

Source of cells?How to expand?How to control differentiation?

Page 4: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Cell Source

Differentiated Cells

Stem Cells

Xenogenic Cells

Autogenic Cells

Syngeneic Cells

Allogenic Cells

Page 5: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

What are Stem Cells?

• Cells that have the ability to divide for indefinite periods in culture and give rise to specialized cells

• 2 Hallmarks of stem cells:1) Self-renewal2) Potential to differentiate along more than

one lineage

Page 6: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Example of Stem Cells – Hematopoietic System

Hierarchy

Palsson, 2004

Page 7: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Adult vs. Embryonic Stem Cells

• Adult Stem CellsDefined wrt age of donor Thought to be lineage-specific

• Embryonic Stem CellsDerived from early embryo prior to

commitment Can give rise to progeny for any

tissue

Page 8: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Scaffold Materials

Polyglycolic acid

Hydrogels

Polylactic-co-glycolic acid

Alginate

Collagen

Page 9: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Scaffolds: Mimic Role of the ECM

• Space formation (hydrogel)– Direct and guide tissue formation and growth

• Mechanical support– Tension (collagen) – Compression (PGs)– Elasticity (elastin)

• Cell-cell, cell-matrix interactions– Attachment, proliferation, migration,

differentiation– Cell function

Page 10: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Design Criteria for Scaffolds

• Biocompatibility− Material must not be rejected by immune

system

• Diffusion of nutrients/wastes• Mechanical integrity

– Support loads at implant site

• Degradability– Non-toxic species easily metabolized– New tissue forms as original graft material

degrades

• Readily processed into (irregular) 3D shapes

Page 11: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Concept of TEVG Development

Tissue Engineered Vascular Graft

* http://www.enduratec.com/pdf/EnduraTEC_BioReactor_Cardiovascular.pdf

+Biopsy

Cell Expansion

Scaffold Culture in Bioreactor

Cells Seeded in Scaffold

Vascular Cells

Animal Trials

Surgical Implantation

Clinical Trials

*

Page 12: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Design Process for Vascular Tissue Engineering

(VTE)• Identify motivation and/or need• Understand normal biology and

pathologies• Identify gold standard• Determine design parameters and

engineering considerations• Develop strategy to repair or

regenerate tissue

Page 13: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

What is the need for Vascular Grafts?

Page 14: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Motivation for Vascular Grafts

• Conduits used to bypass occluded region in treatment of – Atherosclerosis– Aneurysmal disease– Arterio-venous dialysis– Trauma

Page 15: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Atherosclerosis

http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/imagepages/18050.htm

Page 16: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Atherosclerosis

Normal Coronary Artery Severe Calcific Coronary Atherosclerosis

http://medweb.bham.ac.uk/http/depts/path/Teaching/foundat/athero/Athero1.htm

Page 17: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

What is the current gold standard treatment?

Page 18: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Current Gold Standard for Vascular Grafts

• Large diameter vessels (> 6mm ID)– Aorta– Synthetic grafts

• Gore-Tex (ePTFE)• Dacron • Polyurethane

• Small Diameter vessels (< 6mm ID)– Coronary artery– Autologous tissue

• Saphenous vein• Internal mammary artery

Page 19: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Coronary Bypass Graft Surgery (CABG)

www.mayoclinic.org/ coronaryartery-jax/

Blockage

Internal mammary artery graft

Saphenous vein graft

Left anterior decending artery

Right coronary artery

Page 20: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Autologous Small-Diameter Vascular Grafts

• Advantages– Patency > 50% over 10 years– Resemblance similar to native vessel

• Disadvantages– Donor site morbidity– Limited supply

• Previous procedure• Peripheral disease

• Synthetic materials ineffective due to thrombosis and intimal hyperplasia

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Ideal Blood Vessel Substitute

• Vascular substitute that mimics the characteristics of native blood vessels– Composition– Structure– Function– Mechanical properties

Page 22: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

What is the normal biology of a blood vessel?

Page 23: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

ADVENTITIAConnective tissue

fibroblasts capillaries

nerves

MEDIA Smooth muscle cells

elastin fibers

INTIMAEndothelial cell lining

Blood Vessel Structure

Page 24: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Blood Vessel Structure

erl.pathology.iupui.edu/ HISTO/LABEL29.HTM

Page 25: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

What are the design requirements and

engineering considerations?

Page 26: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Functions/Requirements of Blood Vessels

• Transports blood (nutrients, wastes)• Resist spontaneous clotting• Vasodilates/vasoconstricts• Withstand pulsatile flow forces

– Pressure (radially = burst pressure)– Shear stress– Cyclic strain

Page 27: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

VTE Design Considerations

• Cell source– Stem cells vs. mature vascular cells– Autologous vs. non-autologous – IR

• Scaffold selection– Natural vs. synthetic– Mechanical properties

• Signals– Biochemical – Mechanical

• Endothelialization of grafts• Cell and ECM fiber organization, orientation

Page 28: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Design Requirements for VTE Scaffolds

• Biocompatible• Nonthrombogenic• Elastic – transmit mechanical stimuli• Viscoelastic – avoid compliance

mismatch• Cell-specific interactions (e.g. cell-

collagen)• Easily, quickly manufactured Minimally, an intimal and media layer likely required for implantation

Page 29: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Mechanical Properties for Vascular Grafts

Lyons et al., 2003

Page 30: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Mechanical Stimuli Influence Vascular Cell Behavior

• Endothelial cells– Shear stress

• Smooth muscle cells– Cyclic strain– Shear stress

• Fibroblasts– Cyclic strain

Page 31: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

SMC Production of ECM Proteins in Response to Cyclic

Stretching

Kim et al., Nature Biotechnology 1999

Page 32: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Mechanical Strength of SMC-Collagen Constructs Subjected to

Cyclic Strain

Kim et al., Nature Biotechnology 1999

Page 33: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Summary of Cyclic Strain Effects on SMCs

• Phenotype• Orientation• ECM production

– Collagen– Elastin– Fibronectin– Proteoglycans

• Growth factor release– bFGF, PDGF, TGF-

• MMP-2 secretion• Stiffness, strength improved in SMC-

seeded constructs

Page 34: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Bioreactor Culture for VTE

• Cells are exposed in vivo to mechanical stimulus, pulsatile flow, which influences their behavior.

• Vascular grafts can be cultured in a bioreactor to mimic in vivo mechanical environment– shear stress– cyclic strain

Page 35: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Concept of TEVG Development

Tissue Engineered Vascular Graft

* http://www.enduratec.com/pdf/EnduraTEC_BioReactor_Cardiovascular.pdf

+Biopsy

Cell Expansion

Scaffold Culture in Bioreactor

Cells Seeded in Scaffold

Vascular Cells

Animal Trials

Surgical Implantation

Clinical Trials

*

Page 36: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

PEG Hydrogel Scaffolds for VTE

Page 37: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Pulsatile Flow Bioreactor

5% CO2

Compliance chamber(s)

Perfusion Chambers

Pulsatile Pump

Reservoir

P

Page 39: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

HASMCs Align in Response to

2 Hz Cyclic Strain

50 m 50 m

Stretched Static

Direction of

Applied Strain

10% strain for 7 days

Page 40: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Outcomes of Bioreactor Culture

• Enhanced tissue growth– Cell proliferation– ECM protein synthesis

• Improved tissue organization, orientation

• Increased mechanical properties• Improved function similar to native

vessels• Do VTE Scaffolds initially require mechanical properties comparable to native vessels? Why?

Page 41: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.
Page 42: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

What VTE strategies have been investigated?

Page 43: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

VTE Approaches

1. Cell-seeded synthetic grafts2. Acellular matrices3. Collagen scaffolds4. Cell sheets5. PGA scaffolds

Page 44: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

VTE Strategy #1: Cell-Seeded Synthetic Grafts

• Eliminate thrombogenecity of material by seeding endothelial cells in lumen

• Issues– Retention of ECs on surface, particularly

when exposed to flow– Formation of uniform cell monolayer– Physical barrier to long term adaptation– No regulation of vasotone intimal

hyperplasia

Page 45: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

VTE Strategy #2: Acellular Matrices

• Rolled, small intestinal submucosa treated to remove cells but leave proteins intact and organized

• Recruitment of cells from surrounding tissue

Page 46: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

VTE Strategy #3: Collagen Scaffolds

Nerem et al., Annu. Rev. Biomed. Eng., 2001

Page 47: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

VTE Strategy #3 Example 2: Collagen Scaffolds

Seliktar et al., 2000

Page 48: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

VTE Strategy #3 Example 2: Collagen Scaffolds

Seliktar et al., 2000

Page 49: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

VTE Strategy #3: Example of SMC Alignment in Collagen

Scaffolds

Seliktar et al., 2000

Page 50: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Seliktar et al., 2000

VTE Strategy #3: Collagen Fibril Organization from

Mechanical Conditioning

Page 51: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Seliktar et al., 2000

VTE Strategy #3: Ring Testing

Page 52: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Nerem et al., Annu. Rev. Biomed. Eng., 2001

VTE Strategy #3: Mechanical Conditioning of Collagen

Constructs

Page 53: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

VTE Strategy #4: Cell Sheets

Nerem et al., Annu. Rev. Biomed. Eng., 2001

Page 54: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

VTE Strategy #5: PGA Scaffold

Nerem et al., Annu. Rev. Biomed. Eng., 2001

Page 55: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

VTE Strategy #5: Bioreactor System for PGA

scaffold

Niklason et al., Science 284: 1999

Page 56: Tissue Engineering Goal: Regenerate or repair tissues Challenge: Understand how tissues are built in-vivo  i.e. what instructions do cells need to organize.

Future Challenges for VTE

• Optimization of in vitro manipulations– Mechanical conditioning– Biochemical supplementation

• In vivo integration of graft with host tissue

• Off the shelf availability