2 research outputs found

    Biomaterials

    Get PDF
    Cell-assembled extracellular matrix (CAM) has been used to produce vascular grafts. While these completely biological vascular grafts performed well in clinical trials, the in vivo remodeling and inflammatory response of this truly "bio" material has not yet been investigated. In this study, human CAM yarns were implanted subcutaneously in nude rats to investigate the innate immune response to this matrix. The impact of processing steps relevant to yarn manufacturing was evaluated (devitalization, decellularization, gamma sterilization, and twisting). We observed that yarns were still present after six months, and were integrated into a non-inflamed loose connective tissue. The CAM was repopulated by fibroblastic cells and blood vessels. While other yarns caused minor peripheral inflammation at an early stage (two weeks of implantation), gamma sterilization triggered a more intense host response dominated by the presence of M1 macrophages. The inflammatory response was resolved at six months. Yarn mechanical strength was decreased two weeks after implantation except for the more compact "twisted" yarn. While the strength of other yarns was stable after initial remodeling, the gamma-sterilized yarn continued to lose mechanical strength over time and was weaker than devitalized (control) yarns at six months. This is the first study to formally demonstrate that devitalized human CAM is very long-lived in vivo and does not trigger a degradative response, but rather is very slowly remodeled. This data supports a strategy to produce human textiles from CAM yarn for regenerative medicine applications where a scaffold with low inflammation and long-term mechanical properties are critical

    Human textiles: A cell-synthesized yarn as a truly "bio" material for tissue engineering applications

    No full text
    International audienceIn the field of tissue engineering, many groups have come to rely on the extracellular matrix produced by cells as the scaffold that provides structure and strength to the engineered tissue. We have previously shown that sheets of Cell-Assembled extracellular Matrix (CAM), which are entirely biological yet robust, can be mass-produced for clinical applications using normal, adult, human fibroblasts. In this article, we demonstrate that CAM yarns can be generated with a range of physical and mechanical properties. We show that this material can be used as a simple suture to close a wound or can be assembled into fully biological, human, tissue-engineered vascular grafts (TEVGs) that have high mechanical strength and are implantable. By combining this truly "bio" material with a textile-based assembly, this original tissue engineering approach is highly versatile and can produce a variety of strong human textiles that can be readily integrated in the body. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Yarn of synthetic biomaterials have been turned into textiles for decades because braiding, knitting and weaving machines can mass-produce medical devices with a wide range of shapes and mechanical properties. Here, we show that robust, completely biological, and human yarn can be produced by normal cells in vitro. This yarn can be used as a simple suture material or to produce the first human textiles. For example, we produced a woven tissue-engineered vascular grafts with burst pressure, suture retention strength and transmural permeability that surpassed clinical requirements. This novel strategy holds the promise of a next generation of medical textiles that will be mechanically strong without any foreign scaffolding, and will have the ability to truly integrate into the host's body
    corecore