TY - JOUR A1 - Al-Hejailan, Reem A1 - Weigel, Tobias A1 - Schürlein, Sebastian A1 - Berger, Constantin A1 - Al-Mohanna, Futwan A1 - Hansmann, Jan T1 - Decellularization of full heart — optimizing the classical sodium-dodecyl-sulfate-based decellularization protocol JF - Bioengineering N2 - Compared to cell therapy, where cells are injected into a defect region, the treatment of heart infarction with cells seeded in a vascularized scaffold bears advantages, such as an immediate nutrient supply or a controllable and persistent localization of cells. For this purpose, decellularized native tissues are a preferable choice as they provide an in vivo-like microenvironment. However, the quality of such scaffolds strongly depends on the decellularization process. Therefore, two protocols based on sodium dodecyl sulfate or sodium deoxycholate were tailored and optimized for the decellularization of a porcine heart. The obtained scaffolds were tested for their applicability to generate vascularized cardiac patches. Decellularization with sodium dodecyl sulfate was found to be more suitable and resulted in scaffolds with a low amount of DNA, a highly preserved extracellular matrix composition, and structure shown by GAG quantification and immunohistochemistry. After seeding human endothelial cells into the vasculature, a coagulation assay demonstrated the functionality of the endothelial cells to minimize the clotting of blood. Human-induced pluripotent-stem-cell-derived cardiomyocytes in co-culture with fibroblasts and mesenchymal stem cells transferred the scaffold into a vascularized cardiac patch spontaneously contracting with a frequency of 25.61 ± 5.99 beats/min for over 16 weeks. The customized decellularization protocol based on sodium dodecyl sulfate renders a step towards a preclinical evaluation of the scaffolds. KW - tissue engineering KW - decellularization KW - vascularized scaffold KW - cardiac patch KW - dynamic culture Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-270781 SN - 2306-5354 VL - 9 IS - 4 ER - TY - THES A1 - Berger, Constantin T1 - Influence of the pancreatic extracellular matrix on pancreatic differentiation of human induced pluripotent stem cells and establishment of 3D organ models T1 - Einfluss der Extrazellulärmatrix des Pankreas auf die pankreatische Differenzierung humaner induziert pluripotenter Stammzellen und Etablierung von 3D Organmodellen N2 - Der Diabetes mellitus bezeichnet eine bislang unheilbare, metabolische Erkrankung, die mit schwerwiegenden Folgeerkrankungen einhergeht. Unter den potentiellen Strategien zur Heilung von Diabetes mellitus stellt die in vitro Generierung adulter β-Zellen des endokrinen Pankreas aus humanen induziert pluripotenten Stammzellen (hiPS) einen vielversprechenden Ansatz dar. Zwar ermöglichen bisherige Protokolle die Herstellung von Zellen mit einem β-Zell-ähnlichen Charakter, jedoch zeigen diese eine zunächst eingeschränkte Funktion, die sich erst im Verlauf einer vollständigen, durch Transplantation induzierten, Reifung der Zellen, normalisiert. Vorangegangene Studien zeigen, dass sich die Extrazellularmatrix (EZM) von Geweben positiv auf das Überleben und die Funktion adulter, isolierter Langerhans-Inseln des Pankreas auswirkt. Vor diesem Hintergrund stellt sich die Frage, ob Einflüsse der organspezifischen EZM die finale Reifung in vitro hergestellter β-Zellen herbeiführen können. Um diese Hypothese zu testen, wurde im Rahmen der vorliegenden Studie die Wirkung der pankreatischen EZM auf die in vitro Differenzierung von hiPS zu endokrinen Zellen des Pankreas untersucht sowie die Eignung der pankreatischen EZM zur Etablierung eines Organmodells des endokrinen Pankreas erprobt. Hierzu wurde zunächst eine pankreasspezifische EZM-Trägerstruktur (PanMa) durch Dezellularisierung von Pankreaten des Schweins mittels Natriumdesoxycholat hergestellt. Die generierte PanMa wurde anhand (immun-) histologischer Färbungen, Rasterelektronen-mikroskopie, Feststellung des DNA-Gehalts sowie durch Versuche zur Perfusion und Wiederbesiedelung mit Endothelzellen eingehend charakterisiert. Zudem wurde auf Basis der ermittelten Daten ein Bewertungssystem (PancScore) zur standardisierten Herstellung der PanMa entwickelt. Als Nächstes wurde untersucht, ob die PanMa über gewebespezifische EZM-Merkmale verfügt. Zu diesem Zweck wurden biophysikalische und strukturelle Eigenschaften wie Festigkeit, Porosität und Hygroskopie mittels rheologischer Messungen sowie Versuchen zur Teilchendiffusion und zum Wasserbindungsverhalten bestimmt und mit azellulären EZMs des Dünndarms (SISser) und der Lunge (LungMa) verglichen. Nach der eingehenden Analyse der PanMa wurde deren Effekt auf die Eigenschaften von Stammzellen sowie auf frühe Stadien der Stammzellentwicklung untersucht. Hierzu wurde die PanMa als Trägerstruktur während der Erhaltung sowie der spontanen Differenzierung von hiPS verwendet und der Einfluss der PanMa anhand von Genexpressionsanalysen und immunhistochemischer Färbungen analysiert. In einem nächsten Schritt wurde die Wirkung der PanMa auf die Differenzierung von hiPS zu endokrinen Zellen des Pankreas untersucht. Hierfür wurde die PanMa zum einen in flüssiger Form als Mediumzusatz sowie als solide Trägerstruktur während der Differenzierung von hiPS zu hormonexprimierenden Zellen (Rezania et al. 2012; Rezania et al. 2014) oder maturierenden β-Zellen verwendet (Rezania et al. 2014). Der Effekt der PanMa wurde anhand von Genexpressions-analysen, immunhistochemischer Färbungen und Analysen zur Glukose-abhängigen Insulinsekretion untersucht. In einem letzten Teil der Studie wurde die Eignung der PanMa zur verlängerten Kultivierung von hiPS-abgeleiteten endokrinen Zellen des Pankreas im Hinblick auf die Etablierung eines Organmodells des endokrinen Pankreas getestet. Hierzu wurde die PanMa zu einem Hydrogel weiterverarbeitet, welches zur Einkapselung und Kultivierung von hiPS-abgeleiteten hormonexprimierenden Zellen eingesetzt wurde. Um die Auswirkungen der Hydrogel-Kultur nachzuvollziehen, wurden die kultivierten Zellen mittels Genexpression, immun-histochemischer Färbungen und Analysen zur Glukose-abhängigen Insulinsekretion untersucht. Mittels Dezellularisierung porziner Pankreaten konnte eine zellfreie, pankreasspezifische EZM-Trägerstruktur mit geringen Restbeständen an DNA sowie einer weitgehend erhaltenen Mikro- und Ultrastruktur mit typischen EZM-Komponenten wie Kollagen I, III und IV hergestellt werden. Im Rahmen der Besiedelung arterieller Gefäße mit humanen Endothelzellen wurde die Zellkompatibilität der hergestellten PanMa sowie eine weitgehende Unversehrtheit der Gefäßstrukturen nachgewiesen. Verglichen zu SISser und LungMa zeichnete sich die PanMa als eine relativ weiche, stark wasserbindende, faserbasierte Struktur aus. Weiterhin konnten Hinweise für einen Effekt der PanMa auf den Stammzellcharakter und die frühe Entwicklung von hiPS beobachtet werden. Hierbei führte die Erhaltung von hiPS auf der PanMa zu einer leicht veränderten Expression von Genen des Kernpluripotenznetzwerks sowie zu einem reduziertem NANOG-Proteinsignal. Einhergehend mit diesen Beobachtungen zeigten hiPS während spontaner Differenzierung auf der PanMa eine verstärkte endodermale Entwicklung. Im Verlauf der pankreatischen Differenzierung führte die Kultivierung auf der PanMa zu einer signifikant verringerten Expression von Glukagon und Somatostatin, während die Expression von Insulin unverändert blieb, was auf eine Verminderung endokriner α- und δ-Zellen hinweist. Diese Veränderung äußerte sich jedoch nicht in einer verbesserten Glukose-abhängigen Insulinsekretion der generierten hormonexprimierenden Zellen. Unter Anwendung der PanMa als Hydrogel konnten hormonexprimierenden Zellen über einen verlängerten Zeitraum kultiviert werden. Nach 21 Tagen in Kultur zeigten die eingekapselten hormonexprimierenden Zellen eine unverändert hohe Viabilität, wiesen allerdings bereits eine erste veränderte Zellanordnung sowie eine leicht verminderte Glukose-abhängige Insulinsekretion auf. Zusammengefasst konnte in dieser Studie ein biologischer Effekt gewebespezifischer EZM-Merkmale auf die Differenzierung von hiPS nachgewiesen werden. Darüber hinaus weisen die Daten auf eine relevante Funktion der EZM im Rahmen der endokrinen Spezifizierung von hiPS während der pankreatischen Differenzierung hin. Diese Beobachtungen verdeutlichen die eminente Rolle der EZM in der Herstellung von funktionalen hiPS-abgeleiteten Zellen und plädieren für eine stärkere Einbindung organspezifischer EZMs im Bereich des Tissue Engineering und der klinischen Translation in der Regenerativen Medizin. N2 - Diabetes mellitus is an incurable, metabolic disease, which is associated with severe long-term complications. The in vitro generation of pancreatic β-cells from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) represent a promising strategy for a curative therapy of diabetes mellitus. However, current differentiation strategies largely fail to produce functional β-cells in vitro and require an additional in vivo transplantation to achieve terminal maturation. Previous studies demonstrated a beneficial effect of the extracellular matrix (ECM) on the survival and sustained function of adult, isolated islets of Langerhans. This raises the question whether organ-specific cell-ECM interactions might represent the missing link driving the final stage of β-cell development. In order to address this issue, this study investigated the impact of the pancreas ECM on in vitro β-cell differentiation and its use for the establishment of a pancreatic endocrine organ model. To this purpose, a pancreas-specific ECM scaffolds (PanMa) was derived from porcine pancreata using whole organ decellularization with Sodium Deoxycholate. In a first step, the generated PanMa was thoroughly characterized using (immuno-) histological stainings, scanning electron microscopy and DNA quantification as well as perfusion and recellularization experiments with endothelial cells. Based on these data, a scoring system (PancScore) for a standardized PanMa generation was developed. Next, the generated PanMa was tested for the presence of tissue-specific ECM features. Therefore, the biophysical and physico-structural characteristics, such as rigidity, porosity and hygroscopy were analyzed using rheological measurements, particle diffusion analyses as well as a water evaporation assay and compared to the properties of ECM scaffolds derived from porcine small intestine (SISser) and lung (LungMa) to examine organ-specific scaffold cues. Following the thorough scaffold characterization, the impact of the PanMa on pluripotency and early development of hiPSC was studied. To this purpose, gene and protein expression of hiPSCs during maintenance culture and spontaneous differentiation on the PanMa were assessed. In a next step, the impact of the PanMa on the pancreatic endocrine differentiation of hiPSCs was tested. Therefore, the PanMa was used as a liquid media supplement or as a solid scaffold during the directed differentiation of hiPSC towards either pancreatic hormone-expressing cells (Rezania et al. 2012; Rezania et al. 2014) or maturing β-cells (Rezania et al. 2014). The impact of the PanMa on the generated cells was examined by gene expression analysis, immunohistochemical staining of important stage markers, as well as glucose stimulated insulin secretion assays. In a last part of this study, the potential of the PanMa for the prolonged culture of hiPSC derived endocrine cells for the establishment of an in vitro organ model of the endocrine pancreas was examined. Therefore, a PanMa-derived hydrogel was generated and used for the encapsulation and culture of hiPSC-derived hormone-expressing cells (HECs). The influence of the PanMa-hydrogel culture was analyzed on gene, protein and functional level by gene expression analysis, immunohistochemical stainings and glucose stimulated insulin secretion. Whole organ decellularization resulted in the generation of an acellular PanMa scaffold, with low amounts of residual DNA and a preserved ECM micro- and ultrastructure, including important ECM components, such as collagen I, III and IV. Furthermore, the PanMa maintained an intact vessel system and was verified as cytocompatible as demonstrated by the successful recellularization of the arterial system with human endothelial cells. In comparison to SISser and LungMa, the PanMa was characterized as a relative soft, hygroscopic scaffold with a collagen-fiber based structure. Furthermore, the findings indicate that the ECM-specific properties have a relevant effect on the stem cell character and early multi-lineage decisions of hiPSCs. In this regard, maintenance of hiPSCs on the PanMa resulted in a slightly changed expression of pluripotency genes (OCT4, SOX2 and NANOG) and a weak immunohistochemical signal for NANOG protein, indicating a PanMa-dependent impact on hiPSC pluripotency. Strikingly, this presumption was corroborated by the finding that culture on the PanMa promoted an endodermal development of hiPSCs during spontaneous differentiation. In line with that, pancreatic differentiation of hiPSC on both the PanMa and SISser resulted in a significant decrease of glucagon and somatostatin gene expression as well as an unaltered insulin expression, suggesting an ECM-driven suppression of the development of non β-cell endocrine cells. However, this change did not result in an improved glucose stimulated insulin secretion of the generated HECs. Moreover, use of the PanMa as a hydrogel allowed prolonged culture of these cells in a defined culture system. HECs were viable after 21 days of culture, however already showed an altered islet morphology as well as a slightly decreased glucose stimulated insulin secretion. Altogether, this study demonstrates a relevant biological effect of tissue specific ECM cues on the in vitro differentiation of hiPSCs. More specifically, the data indicate an involvement of the ECM in the endocrine commitment of hiPSC-derived pancreatic cells during directed differentiation highlighting the ECM as an important regulator of pancreatic development. Collectively, these findings emphasize the relevance of the ECM for the fabrication of functional hiPSC-derived cell types and suggest a much stronger consideration of organ specific ECM cues for tissue engineering approaches as well as clinical translation in regenerative medicine. KW - Bauchspeicheldrüse KW - Induzierte pluripotente Stammzelle KW - Bindegewebe KW - Regenerative Medizin KW - Zelldifferenzierung KW - Extrazellulärmatrix KW - pancreas KW - Pankreas KW - Induced pluripotent stem cells KW - extracellular matrix KW - pancreatic differentiation KW - beta cell KW - tissue engineering KW - regenerative medicine Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-241268 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Bothe, Friederike A1 - Deubel, Anne-Kathrin A1 - Hesse, Eliane A1 - Lotz, Benedict A1 - Groll, Jürgen A1 - Werner, Carsten A1 - Richter, Wiltrud A1 - Hagmann, Sebastien T1 - Treatment of focal cartilage defects in minipigs with zonal chondrocyte/mesenchymal progenitor cell constructs JF - International Journal of Molecular Sciences N2 - Despite advances in cartilage repair strategies, treatment of focal chondral lesions remains an important challenge to prevent osteoarthritis. Articular cartilage is organized into several layers and lack of zonal organization of current grafts is held responsible for insufficient biomechanical and biochemical quality of repair-tissue. The aim was to develop a zonal approach for cartilage regeneration to determine whether the outcome can be improved compared to a non-zonal strategy. Hydrogel-filled polycaprolactone (PCL)-constructs with a chondrocyte-seeded upper-layer deemed to induce hyaline cartilage and a mesenchymal stromal cell (MSC)-containing bottom-layer deemed to induce calcified cartilage were compared to chondrocyte-based non-zonal grafts in a minipig model. Grafts showed comparable hardness at implantation and did not cause visible signs of inflammation. After 6 months, X-ray microtomography (µCT)-analysis revealed significant bone-loss in both treatment groups compared to empty controls. PCL-enforcement and some hydrogel-remnants were retained in all defects, but most implants were pressed into the subchondral bone. Despite important heterogeneities, both treatments reached a significantly lower modified O’Driscoll-score compared to empty controls. Thus, PCL may have induced bone-erosion during joint loading and misplacement of grafts in vivo precluding adequate permanent orientation of zones compared to surrounding native cartilage. KW - cartilage repair KW - osteochondral defect KW - tissue engineering KW - starPEG hydrogel KW - chondrocyte KW - MSC KW - zonal construct KW - minipig Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-285118 SN - 1422-0067 VL - 20 IS - 3 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Groeber, Florian A1 - Engelhardt, Lisa A1 - Lange, Julia A1 - Kurdyn, Szymon A1 - Schmid, Freia F. A1 - Rücker, Christoph A1 - Mielke, Stephan A1 - Walles, Heike A1 - Hansmann, Jan T1 - A First Vascularized Skin Equivalent as an Alternative to Animal Experimentation JF - ALTEX - Alternatives to Animal Experimentation N2 - Tissue-engineered skin equivalents mimic key aspects of the human skin, and can thus be employed as wound coverage for large skin defects or as in vitro test systems as an alternative to animal models. However, current skin equivalents lack a functional vasculature limiting clinical and research applications. This study demonstrates the generation of a vascularized skin equivalent with a perfused vascular network by combining a biological vascularized scaffold (BioVaSc) based on a decellularized segment of a porcine jejunum and a tailored bioreactor system. Briefly, the BioVaSc was seeded with human fibroblasts, keratinocytes, and human microvascular endothelial cells. After 14 days at the air-liquid interface, hematoxylin & eosin and immunohistological staining revealed a specific histological architecture representative of the human dermis and epidermis including a papillary-like architecture at the dermal-epidermal-junction. The formation of the skin barrier was measured non-destructively using impedance spectroscopy. Additionally, endothelial cells lined the walls of the formed vessels that could be perfused with a physiological volume flow. Due to the presence of a complex in-vivo-like vasculature, the here shown skin equivalent has the potential for skin grafting and represents a sophisticated in vitro model for dermatological research. KW - alternative to animal testing KW - skin equivalents KW - tissue engineering KW - vascularization Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-164438 VL - 33 IS - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Haeusner, Sebastian A1 - Herbst, Laura A1 - Bittorf, Patrick A1 - Schwarz, Thomas A1 - Henze, Chris A1 - Mauermann, Marc A1 - Ochs, Jelena A1 - Schmitt, Robert A1 - Blache, Ulrich A1 - Wixmerten, Anke A1 - Miot, Sylvie A1 - Martin, Ivan A1 - Pullig, Oliver T1 - From Single Batch to Mass Production–Automated Platform Design Concept for a Phase II Clinical Trial Tissue Engineered Cartilage Product JF - Frontiers in Medicine N2 - Advanced Therapy Medicinal Products (ATMP) provide promising treatment options particularly for unmet clinical needs, such as progressive and chronic diseases where currently no satisfying treatment exists. Especially from the ATMP subclass of Tissue Engineered Products (TEPs), only a few have yet been translated from an academic setting to clinic and beyond. A reason for low numbers of TEPs in current clinical trials and one main key hurdle for TEPs is the cost and labor-intensive manufacturing process. Manual production steps require experienced personnel, are challenging to standardize and to scale up. Automated manufacturing has the potential to overcome these challenges, toward an increasing cost-effectiveness. One major obstacle for automation is the control and risk prevention of cross contaminations, especially when handling parallel production lines of different patient material. These critical steps necessitate validated effective and efficient cleaning procedures in an automated system. In this perspective, possible technologies, concepts and solutions to existing ATMP manufacturing hurdles are discussed on the example of a late clinical phase II trial TEP. In compliance to Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) guidelines, we propose a dual arm robot based isolator approach. Our novel concept enables complete process automation for adherent cell culture, and the translation of all manual process steps with standard laboratory equipment. Moreover, we discuss novel solutions for automated cleaning, without the need for human intervention. Consequently, our automation concept offers the unique chance to scale up production while becoming more cost-effective, which will ultimately increase TEP availability to a broader number of patients. KW - ATMP KW - tissue engineering KW - GMP KW - manufacturing KW - autologous KW - cartilage regeneration KW - automation & robotics KW - automation Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-244631 SN - 2296-858X VL - 8 ER - TY - THES A1 - Heffels, Karl-Heinz T1 - Functional nanofibres for regenerative medicine T1 - Funktionelle Nanofasern für die regenerative Medizin N2 - This thesis concerned the design and examination of a scaffold for tissue engineering applications. The template for the presented scaffold came from nature itself: the intercellular space in tissues that provides structure and support to the cells of the respective tissue, known as extracellular matrix (ECM). Fibres are a predominant characteristic feature of ECM, providing adhesion sites for cell-matrix interactions. In this dissertation a fibrous mesh was generated using the electrospinning technique to mimic the fibrous structure of the ECM. Two base polymers were explored: a biodegradable polyester, poly(D,L-lactide-co-glycolide); and a functional PEG-based star polymer, NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO). This topic was described in three major parts: the first part was materials based, concerning the chemical design and characterisation of the polymer scaffolds; the focus was then shifted to the cellular response to this fibrous scaffold; and finally the in vivo performance of the material was preliminarily assessed. The first steps towards an electrospun mesh started with adjusting the spinning parameters for the generation of homogeneous fibres. As reported in Chapter 3 a suitable setup configuration was on the one hand comprised of a spinning solution that consisted of 28.5 w/v% PLGA RG 504 and 6 w/v% NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO) in 450 µL acetone, 50 µL DMSO and 10 µL of an aqueous trifluoroacetic acid solution. On the other hand an ideal spinning behaviour was achieved at process parameters such as a flow rate of 0.5 mL/h, spinneret to collector distance of 12-16 cm and a voltage of 13 kV. The NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO) containing fibres proved to be highly hydrophilic as the functional additive was present on the fibre surface. Furthermore, the fibres featured a bulk degradation pattern as a consequence of the proportion of PLGA. Besides the morphologic similarity to ECM fibres, the functionality of the electrospun fibres is also decisive for a successful ECM mimicry. In Chapter 4, the passive as well as active functionality of the fibres was investigated. The fibres were required to be protein repellent to prevent an unspecific cell adhesion. This was proven as even 6.5 % sP(EO-stat-PO) in the PLGA fibres reduced any unspecific protein adsorption of bovine serum albumin and foetal calf serum to less than 1 %. However, avidin based proteins attached to the fibres. This adhesion process was avoided by an additional fibre surface treatment with glycidol. The active functionalisation of NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO)/PLGA fibres was investigated with two fluorescent dyes and biocytin. A threefold, chemically orthogonal, fibre modification was achieved with these dyes. The chapters about the chemical and mechanical properties laid the basis for the in vitro chapters where a specific fibre functionalisation with peptides was conducted to analyse the cell adhesion and biochemical expressions. Beginning with fibroblasts in Chapter 5 the focus was on the specific cell adhesion on the electrospun fibres. While NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO)/PLGA fibres without peptides did not allow any adhesion of fibroblasts, a fibre modification with GRGDS (an adhesion mediating peptide sequence) induced the adhesion and spreading of human dermal fibroblasts on the fibrous scaffolds. The control sequence GRGES that has no adhesion mediating qualities did not lead to any cell adhesion as observed on fibres without modifications. While the experiments of Chapter 5 were a proof-of-concept, in Chapter 6 a possible application in cartilage tissue engineering was examined. Therefore, primary human chondrocytes were seeded on fibrous scaffolds with various peptide sequences. Though the chondrocytes exhibited high viability on all scaffolds, an active interaction of cells and fibres was only found for the decorin derived sequence CGKLER. Live-cell-imaging revealed both cell attachment and migration within CGKLER-modified meshes. As chondrocytes undergo a de-differentiation towards a fibroblast-like phenotype, the chondrogenic re-differentiation on these scaffolds was investigated in a long term cell culture experiment of 28 days. Therefore, the glycosaminoglycan production was analysed as well as the mRNA expression of genes coding for collagen I and II, aggrecan and proteoglycan 4. In general only low amounts of the chondrogenic markers were measured, suggesting no chondrogenic differentiation. For conclusive evidence follow-up experiments are required that support or reject the findings. The success of an implant for tissue engineering relies not only on the response of the targeted cell type but also on the immune reaction caused by leukocytes. Hence, Chapter 7 dealt with primary human macrophages and their behaviour and phenotype on two-dimensional (2D) surfaces compared to three-dimensional (3D) fibrous substrates. It was found that the general non-adhesiveness of NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO) surfaces and fibres does not apply to macrophages. The cells aligned along the fibres on surfaces or resided in the pores of the meshes. On flat surfaces without 3D structure the macrophages showed a retarded adhesion kinetic accompanied with a high migratory activity indicating their search for a topographical feature to adhere to. Moreover, a detailed investigation of cell surface markers and chemokine signalling revealed that macrophages on 2D surfaces exhibited surface markers indicating a healing phenotype while the chemokine release suggested a pro-inflammatory phenotype. Interestingly, the opposite situation was found on 3D fibrous substrates with pro-inflammatory surface markers and pro-angiogenic cytokine release. As the immune response largely depends on cellular communication, it was concluded that the NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO)/PLGA fibres induce an adequate immune response with promising prospects to be used in a scaffold for tissue engineering. The final chapter of this thesis reports on a first in vivo study conducted with the presented electrospun fibres. Here, the fibres were combined with a polypropylene mesh for the treatment of diaphragmatic hernias in a rabbit model. Two scaffold series were described that differed in the overall surface morphology: while the fibres of Series A were incorporated into a thick gel of NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO), the scaffolds of Series B featured only a thin hydrogel layer so that the overall fibrous structure could be retained. After four months in vivo the treated defects of the diaphragm were significantly smaller and filled mainly with scar tissue. Thick granulomas occurred on scaffolds of Series A while the implants of Series B did not induce any granuloma formation. As a consequence of the generally positive outcome of this study, the constructs were enhanced with a drug release system in a follow-up project. The incorporated drug was the MMP-inhibitor Ilomastat which is intended to reduce the formation of scar tissue. In conclusion, the simple and straight forward fabrication, the threefold functionalisation possibility and general versatile applicability makes the meshes of NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO)/PLGA fibres a promising candidate to be applied in tissue engineering scaffolds in the future. N2 - Diese Dissertation beschäftigte sich mit der Entwicklung und Untersuchung eines Gerüsts zur Geweberegeneration. Der interzelluläre Raum, der in Geweben für die Gewebestruktur verantwortlich ist, wurde als Vorbild aus der Natur für das entwickelte Gerüst verwendet. Fasern sind in dieser extrazellulären Matrix (EZM) ein charakteristischer Bestandteil, die Adhäsionssequenzen für Zell-Matrix-Interaktionen enthalten und zur strukturellen Organisation der Gewebe beitragen. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden Faservliese mit Hilfe des elektrostatischen Verspinnens hergestellt, um die natürlichen Fasern der EZM zu imitieren. Zwei Polymere bildeten die chemische Grundlage für diese Fasern: Ein bioabbaubarer Polyester, Poly(D,L-Laktid-co-Glykolid) (PLGA) und ein funktionales auf Polyethylenglykol basierendes, sternförmiges Polymer, NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO). Der erste Teil des in drei Hauptteile untergliederten Themas beschäftigte sich mit dem chemischen Design und der Fasercharakterisierung im Sinne der Materialeigenschaften. Der zweite Teil betrachtet die Auswirkungen der Fasern auf zellulärer Ebene, während der dritte Teil einen ersten Eindruck über die in vivo Reaktion auf die Materialien vermittelt. Die ersten Schritte in Richtung eines elektrostatisch gesponnenen Vlieses begannen mit der Erforschung geeigneter Einstellungen für eine homogene Faserproduktion. Kapitel 3 thematisiert geeignete Spinnparameter, zu denen auf der einen Seite eine spinnfähige Lösung gehörte, die aus 28.5 w/v% PLGA RG 504 und 6 w/v% NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO) in 450 µL Aceton, 50 µL DMSO und 10 µL trifluoressigsaurer wässriger Lösung besteht. Auf der anderen Seite wurden Prozessparameter gefunden, wie zum Beispiel eine Flussrate von 0.5 mL/h und ein Kollektor-Abstand von 12-16 cm, die bei einer Potentialdifferenz von 13 kV ein stabiles Spinnverhalten garantierten. Fasern mit dem Additiv NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO) zeigten eine äußerst starke Hydrophilie, da das Additiv während des Spinnprozesses an die Faseroberfläche segregierte. Des Weiteren sind die Fasern dank des PLGA-Anteils nach einem Volumenabbaumechanismus unter physiologischen Bedingungen degradierbar. Neben der morphologischen Ähnlichkeit zwischen natürlichen Fasern der EZM und elektrogesponnenen Fasern ist die Funktionalität der synthetischen Fasern entscheidend für eine erfolgreiche Imitation der EZM. Kapitel 4 betrachtet deswegen sowohl die passive als auch aktive Funktionalität der Fasern. Unter passive Funktionalität fällt das proteinabweisende Verhalten, welches eine unspezifische Zelladhäsion verhindert. Es wurde gezeigt, dass ein Anteil von 6.5 % sP(EO-stat-PO) in den PLGA-Fasern ausreicht, um die unspezifische Adhäsion von Albumin aus Rinderserum und fötalem Kälberserum auf weniger als 1 % zu senken. Dennoch adhärierten avidinbasierte Proteine auf den Fasern, was jedoch durch eine Behandlung mit Glycidol unterbunden werden konnte. Die aktive Funktionalisierung wurde exemplarisch mit zwei Fluoreszenzfarbstoffen und Biocytin untersucht. Mit diesen Modellmolekülen wurde eine dreifache, chemisch orthogonale Fasermodifizierung erreicht. Die Kapitel über die chemischen und mechanischen Eigenschaften haben die Grundlage für in vitro Zellversuche gelegt, bei denen eine Faserfunktionalisierung mit Peptidsequenzen durchgeführt wurde, um eine spezifische Zelladhäsion zu erreichen und die biochemische Reaktion der Zellen zu untersuchen. In Kapitel 5 lag der Fokus auf der spezifischen Adhäsion von humanen dermalen Fibroblasten an den elektrogesponnenen Fasern. Während NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO)/PLGA Fasern ohne Peptide keine Zelladhäsion zuließen, induzierte eine Fasermodifikation mit GRGDS, einer adhäsionsvermittelnden Peptidsequenz, sowohl die Adhäsion als auch Ausbreitung der Fibroblasten auf den Fasern. Eine Kontrollsequenz ohne adhäsionsvermittelnde Eigenschaften (GRGES), führte, wie auch Fasern ohne Peptide, zu keiner Zelladhäsion. Die Experimente von Kapitel 6 gingen über das reine Machbarkeitskonzept von Kapitel 5 hinaus, indem eine mögliche Anwendung im Bereich der Knorpelregeneration untersucht wurde. Daher wurden primäre humane Chondrozyten auf Faservliesen ausgesät, die mit unterschiedlichen Peptiden modifiziert wurden. Trotz einer allgemein sehr guten Vitalität der Zellen auf allen Fasertypen, zeigten die Chondrozyten nur auf Vliesen mit der aus Decorin abgeleiteten CGKLER-Sequenz eine aktive Interaktion. Diese konnte mit dem Live-Cell-Imaging-Verfahren anhand der Zelladhäsion und Zellmigration beobachtet werden. Da Chondrozyten in der 2D-Expansionszellkultur einer Dedifferenzierung in Richtung eines Fibroblasten ähnlichen Zelltypen unterliegen, wurde eine 28-tägige Studie durchgeführt, um das Redifferenzierungsverhalten auf den Fasergerüsten zu untersuchen. Dazu wurde sowohl die Glykosaminoglykanproduktion analysiert als auch die mRNA Expression der Gene, die die Kollagen I und II, Aggrecan und Proteoglykan 4 Produktion regulieren. Die chondrogenen Marker wurden in diesen Versuchen nur geringfügig ausgeschüttet, was in Anbetracht der großen Varianzen in den Messwerten auf keine Redifferenzierung schließen lässt. Für eine abschließende Beurteilung werden Folgeexperimente empfohlen, die die gemachten Beobachtungen bestärken oder widerlegen. Der Erfolg eines Implantats zur Geweberegeneration beruht nicht nur auf der gewünschten Reaktion des Zielzelltyps, sondern auch auf der Immunreaktion des Organismus, welche durch Leukozyten gesteuert wird. Folglich beschäftigte sich Kapitel 7 mit dem Verhalten und den Phänotypen primärer humaner Makrophagen auf dreidimensionalen Fasergerüsten und zweidimensionalen Oberflächen im Vergleich zueinander. Bei den Versuchen zeigte sich, dass die generelle Nicht-Adhäsivität von NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO) Oberflächen für Makrophagen nicht zutrifft. Die Zellen richteten sich an den Fasern auf den Oberflächen aus oder saßen in den Poren der Vliese. Auf flachen Oberflächen ohne dreidimensionale Struktur wiesen die Makrophagen ein verzögertes Adhäsionsverhalten auf und migrierten stark über die Oberfläche auf der Suche nach topographischen Unebenheiten, um dort adhärent zu werden. Des Weiteren zeigte eine detaillierte Untersuchung der Oberflächenmarker und der Zytokinausschüttung, dass Makrophagen auf 2D-Oberflächen gemäß der Oberflächenmarker einen entzündungs-hemmenden Phänotypen aufwiesen, während die Zytokinausschüttung einen entzündungs-fördernden Phänotypen suggerierte. Interessanterweise bot sich das entgegengesetzte Bild auf 3D-Faseroberflächen. Hier wurde die Erkenntnis gewonnen, dass die Morphologie einen größeren Einfluss auf die Zellreaktion hat als die Oberflächenchemie. Da die Immunantwort eines Organismus auf ein Implantat stark von der interzellularen Kommunikation abhängt, wurde gefolgert, dass die NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO)/PLGA Fasern eine adäquate Immunantwort hervorrufen mit vielversprechenden Aussichten, die Fasergerüste im Bereich der Geweberegeneration einzusetzen. Das letzte Kapitel der Dissertation berichtet über eine erste in vivo Studie der hier vorgestellten Fasern. Mit den Fasern wurde ein bestehendes Behandlungskonzept für Hernien des Zwerchfells erweitert und die Leistungsfähigkeit in einem Kaninchenmodell überprüft. Zwei Gerüsttypen wurden untersucht, die sich in der Oberflächenmorphologie maßgeblich unterschieden: In Serie A wurden die elektrogesponnenen Fasern in ein Gel aus NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO) gebettet, während die Fasern in Serie B nur mit einer dünnen Gelschicht bedeckt wurden, so dass die topografische Faserstruktur erhalten blieb. Nach 4 Monaten in vivo waren die behandelten Zwerchfelldefekte signifikant kleiner und überwiegend mit Narbengewebe gefüllt. Die ausgeprägte Granulombildung bei Fasergerüsten der Serie A konnte in der darauffolgenden Studie (Serie B) minimiert werden. Das gute Abschneiden dieser Studien wurde zum Anlass genommen, die Vliese weiterzuentwickeln und eine Medikamentenfreisetzung (Ilomastat) zu integrieren, um die Narbenbildung zu minimieren. Zusammenfassend beschreibt diese Dissertation einen einfachen und direkten Weg, Fasern für eine gezielte Geweberegeneration zu erzeugen, die dreifach funktionalisierbar und vielseitig anwendbar sind. Dies macht Fasergerüste auf der Basis von NCO-sP(EO-stat-PO)/PLGA zu einem vielversprechenden Kandidaten um in der Geweberegeneration eingesetzt zu werden. KW - Nanofaser KW - Gewebe KW - Regeneration KW - Extrazelluläre Matrix KW - Polymere KW - Elektrostatisches Verspinnen KW - Geweberegeneration KW - Fibroblasten KW - Makrophagen KW - Chondrozyten KW - Wirkstofffreisetzung KW - Oberflächenfunktionalisierung KW - Electrospinning KW - tissue engineering KW - surface functionalisation KW - drug release Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-75684 N1 - Die Arbeit wurde am Lehrstuhl für Funktionswerkstoffe der Medizin und der Zahnheilkunde angefertigt ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hinderer, Svenja A1 - Shen, Nian A1 - Ringuette, Léa-Jeanne A1 - Hansmann, Jan A1 - Reinhardt, Dieter P A1 - Brucker, Sara Y A1 - Davis, Elaine C A1 - Schenke-Layland, Katja T1 - In vitro elastogenesis: instructing human vascular smooth muscle cells to generate an elastic fiber-containing extracellular matrix scaffold JF - Biomedical Materials N2 - Elastic fibers are essential for the proper function of organs including cardiovascular tissues such as heart valves and blood vessels. Although (tropo)elastin production in a tissue-engineered construct has previously been described, the assembly to functional elastic fibers in vitro using human cells has been highly challenging. In the present study, we seeded primary isolated human vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) onto 3D electrospun scaffolds and exposed them to defined laminar shear stress using a customized bioreactor system. Increased elastin expression followed by elastin deposition onto the electrospun scaffolds, as well as on newly formed fibers, was observed after six days. Most interestingly, we identified the successful deposition of elastogenesis-associated proteins, including fibrillin-1 and -2, fibulin-4 and -5, fibronectin, elastin microfibril interface located protein 1 (EMILIN-1) and lysyl oxidase (LOX) within our engineered constructs. Ultrastructural analyses revealed a developing extracellular matrix (ECM) similar to native human fetal tissue, which is composed of collagens, microfibrils and elastin. To conclude, the combination of a novel dynamic flow bioreactor and an electrospun hybrid polymer scaffold allowed the production and assembly of an elastic fiber-containing ECM. KW - elastin KW - elastic fibers KW - electrospinning KW - tissue engineering KW - regenerative medicine KW - heart valve KW - cardiovascular Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-254074 VL - 10 IS - 3 ER - TY - THES A1 - Hochleitner, Gernot T1 - Advancing melt electrospinning writing for fabrication of biomimetic structures T1 - Entwicklung des Melt Electrospinning Writing zur Erzeugung biomimetischer Strukturen N2 - In order to mimic the extracellular matrix for tissue engineering, recent research approaches often involve 3D printing or electrospinning of fibres to scaffolds as cell carrier material. Within this thesis, a micron fibre printing process, called melt electrospinning writing (MEW), combining both additive manufacturing and electrospinning, has been investigated and improved. Thus, a unique device was developed for accurate process control and manufacturing of high quality constructs. Thereby, different studies could be conducted in order to understand the electrohydrodynamic printing behaviour of different medically relevant thermoplastics as well as to characterise the influence of MEW on the resulting scaffold performance. For reproducible scaffold printing, a commonly occurring processing instability was investigated and defined as pulsing, or in extreme cases as long beading. Here, processing analysis could be performed with the aim to overcome those instabilities and prevent the resulting manufacturing issues. Two different biocompatible polymers were utilised for this study: poly(ε-caprolactone) (PCL) as the only material available for MEW until then and poly(2-ethyl-2-oxazoline) for the first time. A hypothesis including the dependency of pulsing regarding involved mass flows regulated by the feeding pressure and the electrical field strength could be presented. Further, a guide via fibre diameter quantification was established to assess and accomplish high quality printing of scaffolds for subsequent research tasks. By following a combined approach including small sized spinnerets, small flow rates and high field strengths, PCL fibres with submicron-sized fibre diameters (fØ = 817 ± 165 nm) were deposited to defined scaffolds. The resulting material characteristics could be investigated regarding molecular orientation and morphological aspects. Thereby, an alignment and isotropic crystallinity was observed that can be attributed to the distinct acceleration of the solidifying jet in the electrical field and by the collector uptake. Resulting submicron fibres formed accurate but mechanically sensitive structures requiring further preparation for a suitable use in cell biology. To overcome this handling issue, a coating procedure, by using hydrophilic and cross-linkable star-shaped molecules for preparing fibre adhesive but cell repellent collector surfaces, was used. Printing PCL fibre patterns below the critical translation speed (CTS) revealed the opportunity to manufacture sinusoidal shaped fibres analogously to those observed using purely viscous fluids falling on a moving belt. No significant influence of the high voltage field during MEW processing could be observed on the buckling phenomenon. A study on the sinusoidal geometry revealed increasing peak-to-peak values and decreasing wavelengths as a function of decreasing collector speeds sc between CTS > sc ≥ 2/3 CTS independent of feeding pressures. Resulting scaffolds printed at 100 %, 90 %, 80 % and 70 % of CTS exhibited significantly different tensile properties, foremost regarding Young’s moduli (E = 42 ± 7 MPa to 173 ± 22 MPa at 1 – 3 % strain). As known from literature, a changed morphology and mechanical environment can impact cell performance substantially leading to a new opportunity of tailoring TE scaffolds. Further, poly(L-lactide-co-ε-caprolactone-co-acryloyl carbonate) as well as poly(ε-caprolactone-co-acryloyl carbonate) (PCLAC) copolymers could be used for MEW printing. Those exhibit the opportunity for UV-initiated radical cross-linking in a post-processing step leading to significantly increased mechanical characteristics. Here, single fibres of the polymer composed of 90 mol.% CL and 10 mol.% AC showed a considerable maximum tensile strength of σmax = 53 ± 16 MPa. Furthermore, sinusoidal meanders made of PCLAC yielded a specific tensile stress-strain characteristic mimicking the qualitative behaviour of tendons or ligaments. Cell viability by L929 murine fibroblasts and live/dead staining with human mesenchymal stem cells revealed a promising biomaterial behaviour pointing out MEW printed PCLAC scaffolds as promising choice for medical repair of load-bearing soft tissue. Indeed, one apparent drawback, the small throughput similar to other AM methods, may still prevent MEW’s industrial application yet. However, ongoing research focusses on enlargement of manufacturing speed with the clear perspective of relevant improvement. Thereby, the utilisation of large spinneret sizes may enable printing of high volume rates, while downsizing the resulting fibre diameter via electrical field and mechanical stretching by the collector uptake. Using this approach, limitations of FDM by small nozzle sizes could be overcome. Thinking visionary, such printing devices could be placed in hospitals for patient-specific printing-on-demand therapies one day. Taking the evolved high deposition precision combined with the unique small fibre diameter sizes into account, technical processing of high performance membranes, filters or functional surface finishes also stands to reason. N2 - Um biomimetische extrazelluläre Matrices für das Tissue Engineering herzustellen, bedienen sich aktuelle Forschungsansätze oftmals der Produktion von Faser-Konstrukten durch additive Fertigung oder Elektrospinn-Verfahren. Das sogenannte Melt Electrospinning Writing (MEW) kombiniert Vorteile beider Techniken und weist dadurch ein hohes Applikationspotential auf. Daher bestand das Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit in der Weiterentwicklung und Erforschung des MEW. Für diesen Zweck wurde eine neuartige Forschungsanlage konzipiert und gebaut, welche mit einzigartiger Verfahrenspräzision und Prozesskontrolle die Fertigung von hochqualitativen Konstrukten ermöglichte. Auf Basis dessen konnten die durchgeführten Studien das Verständnis des elektrohydrodynamischen Druckvorgangs und der untersuchten Prozessparameter vertiefen und letztendlich zur Ausweitung des Verfahrens auf neue medizinisch relevante Thermoplaste beitragen. Um eine reproduzierbare Herstellung von Scaffolds zu ermöglichen, wurde eine häufig auftretende Prozessinstabilität erforscht und als pulsing, oder in stark ausgeprägten Fällen als long beading, klassifiziert. Durch Prozessanalyse konnte zudem eine Methode zur Vermeidung dieser Instabilität entwickelt werden. Dafür wurden zwei unterschiedliche biokompatible Polymere verwendet: Poly(ε-Caprolacton) (PCL) als bis dahin einziger verfügbarer MEW Werkstoff, sowie erstmalig Poly(2-Ethyl-2-Oxazolin). Die aufgestellte Hypothese umfasst eine universelle Abhängigkeit der pulsing Instabilität zu involvierten Massenströmen, welche durch Anpassung des angelegten Prozessdruckes und der elektrischen Feldstärke reguliert werden kann. Um ein optimales Prozessergebnis für nachfolgende Forschungsarbeiten zu erzielen, wurde zusätzlich ein Leitfaden zur quantitativen Bewertung des Grades der Instabilität bereitgestellt. Durch Kombination kleiner Spinndüsen, kleiner Schmelze-Flussraten und hoher elektrischen Feldstärken, konnten erstmalig PCL Fasern mit sub-mikron Durchmessern (fØ = 817 ± 165 nm) zu präzisen Scaffolds verarbeitet werden. Diese wurden anschließend durch materialwissenschaftliche Analytik charakterisiert. Dabei wurde eine molekulare Vorzugsorientierung und isotrope Kristallausrichtung entlang der Faser beobachtet, welche durch den hohen Verstreckungsgrad des erstarrenden Polymerstrahls erklärt werden konnte. Resultierende sub-mikron Fasern konnten zwar für einen akkuraten Druckvorgang verwendet werden, jedoch erwiesen sich die Strukturen als instabil und daher nicht geeignet für die Handhabung bei Zellkulturstudien. Aus diesem Grund wurde ein Beschichtungsansatz mittels hydrophilen und vernetzbaren Sternmolekülen für Substratflächen herangezogen. Während solche modifizierten Oberflächen bekanntermaßen Zelladhäsion verhindern, konnten gedruckte sub-mikron Scaffolds auf der Oberfläche haften und so für biologische Studien verwendet werden. Durch das gezielte Ablegen von Fasern unterhalb der kritischen Translationsgeschwindigkeit (CTS) des Kollektors, konnten sinusförmige Faserstrukturen erzeugt werden. Analog zu rein viskosen Fluiden, welche durch ein bewegliches Band aufgesammelt werden, schien dieser Vorgang dem sogenannten buckling zu unterliegen und daher phänomenologisch nicht oder nur geringfügig vom elektrischen Feld abhängig zu sein. Zudem konnte eine durchgeführte Studie die direkte Abhängigkeit der Fasergeometrie mit der Kollektorbewegung belegen. Unabhängig vom Prozessdruck, führte eine verminderte Kollektorgeschwindigkeit sc in den Grenzen CTS > sc ≥ 2/3 CTS zu erhöhten Amplituden bzw. Spitze-zu-Spitze Werten und verkürzten Wellenlängen. Durch das kontrollierte Ablegen der Fasern bei Geschwindigkeiten von 100 %, 90 % 80 % und 70 % CTS konnten zudem Scaffolds mit unterschiedlichen mechanischen Eigenschaften hergestellt werden. Speziell der Zugmodul wurde dadurch etwa um eine halbe Größenordnung moduliert (Es = 42 ± 7 MPa bis 173 ± 22 MPa bei 1 – 3 % Dehnung). Dies ist in Kombination mit der Strukturierung für maßgeschneiderte TE Scaffolds von großem Interesse, da zelluläre Systeme sensibel auf ihre Umgebung reagieren können. Des Weiteren wurden Poly(L-Lactid-co-ε-Caprolacton-co-Acryloylcarbonat) und Poly(ε-Caprolacton-co-Acryloylcarbonat) (PCLAC) Copolymere hinsichtlich deren MEW Verarbeitbarkeit untersucht. Solche Kunststoffe können nach dem Druckvorgang mit UV-Strahlung radikalisch vernetzt werden und dadurch deutlich erhöhte mechanische Eigenschaften ausbilden. Für Fasern aus 90 mol.% CL und 10 mol.% AC wurden beispielsweise maximale Zugfestigkeiten von σmax = 53 ± 16 MPa ermittelt. MEW gedruckte sinusförmige Faserstrukturen aus PCLAC wiesen darüber hinaus ein biomimetisches Spannungs-Dehnung-Verhalten auf, vergleichbar zu Sehnen- und Ligamentgewebe. Eine Untersuchung der Zellviabilität von L929 murinen Fibroblasten im Eluattest, sowie eine lebend/tot-Färbung von humanen mesenchymalen Stammzellen auf den Scaffolds, ergab vielversprechende Resultate und damit ein relevantes Anwendungspotential solcher Strukturen als Implantat. Neben genannten Vorteilen, weist MEW als Verfahren bislang allerdings geringe Produktionsgeschwindigkeiten auf. Diese sind daher in den Fokus aktueller Forschungsvorhaben gerückt. Einen Ansatz hierfür bieten Spinndüsen mit hohem Innendurchmesser und erhöhter Austragsrate, wobei die optimierte elektrische Feldstärke, sowie ein Verstrecken durch die Kollektorbewegung, zu den erwünschten dünnen Fasern führen können. Dadurch kann die abwärtslimitierte Düsengröße des FDM Verfahrens überwunden werden. Visionär gedacht, könnte eine solche Anlage direkt in Krankenhäusern zur Fertigung von patienten- und defektspezifischen Implantaten eingesetzt werden. Darüber hinaus ermöglicht die hohe Präzision, zusammen mit dem Drucken von Mikro-Fasern, einen technischen Einsatz zur Herstellung von Membranen, Filtern oder funktionalen Oberflächenbeschichtungen. KW - scaffold KW - polymer KW - 3D printing KW - additive manufacturing KW - melt electrospinning KW - melt electrowriting KW - tissue engineering KW - polymer processing Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-162197 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hrynevich, Andrei A1 - Achenbach, Pascal A1 - Jungst, Tomasz A1 - Brook, Gary A. A1 - Dalton, Paul D. T1 - Design of Suspended Melt Electrowritten Fiber Arrays for Schwann Cell Migration and Neurite Outgrowth JF - Macromolecular Bioscience N2 - In this study, well-defined, 3D arrays of air-suspended melt electrowritten fibers are made from medical grade poly(ɛ-caprolactone) (PCL). Low processing temperatures, lower voltages, lower ambient temperature, increased collector distance, and high collector speeds all aid to direct-write suspended fibers that can span gaps of several millimeters between support structures. Such processing parameters are quantitatively determined using a “wedge-design” melt electrowritten test frame to identify the conditions that increase the suspension probability of long-distance fibers. All the measured parameters impact the probability that a fiber is suspended over multimillimeter distances. The height of the suspended fibers can be controlled by a concurrently fabricated fiber wall and the 3D suspended PCL fiber arrays investigated with early post-natal mouse dorsal root ganglion explants. The resulting Schwann cell and neurite outgrowth extends substantial distances by 21 d, following the orientation of the suspended fibers and the supporting walls, often generating circular whorls of high density Schwann cells between the suspended fibers. This research provides a design perspective and the fundamental parametric basis for suspending individual melt electrowritten fibers into a form that facilitates cell culture. KW - cell migration KW - electrospinning KW - fibers KW - neurite growth KW - polycaprolactone KW - tissue engineering Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-257535 VL - 21 IS - 7 ER - TY - THES A1 - Kremer, Antje T1 - Tissue Engineering of a Vascularized Meniscus Implant T1 - Tissue Engineering eines vaskularisierten Meniskus-Implantates N2 - The knee joint is a complex composite joint containing the C-shaped wedge-like menisci composed of fibrocartilage. Due to their complex composition and structure, they provide mechanical resilience to the knee joint protecting the articular cartilage. Because of the limited repair potential, meniscal injuries do not only affect the meniscus itself but also lead to altered joint homeostasis and inevitably to secondary osteoarthritis. The meniscus was characterized focusing on its anatomy, structure and meniscal markers such as aggrecan, collagen type I (Col I) and Col II. The components relevant for meniscus tissue engineering, namely cells, Col I scaffolds, biochemical and biomechanical stimuli were studied. Meniscal cells (MCs) were isolated from meniscus, mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) from bone marrow and dermal microvascular endothelial cells (d-mvECs) from foreskin biopsies. For the human (h) meniscus model, wedge-shape compression of a hMSC-laden Col I gel was successfully established. During three weeks of static culture, the biochemical stimulus transforming growth factor beta-3 (TGF beta-3) led to a compact collagen structure. On day 21, this meniscus model showed high metabolic activity and matrix remodeling as confirmed by matrix metalloproteinases detection. The fibrochondrogenic properties were illustrated by immunohistochemical detection of meniscal markers, significant GAG/DNA increase and increased compressive properties. For further improvement, biomechanical stimulation systems by compression and hydrostatic pressure were designed. As one vascularization approach, direct stimulation with ciclopirox olamine (CPX) significantly increased sprouting of hd-mvEC spheroids even in absence of auxiliary cells such as MSCs. Second, a cell sheet composed of hMSCs and hd-mvECs was fabricated by temperature triggered cell sheet engineering and transferred onto the wedge-shaped meniscus model. Third, a biological vascularized scaffold (BioVaSc-TERM) was re-endothelialized with hd-mvECs providing a viable vascularized network. The vascularized BioVaSc-TERM was suggested as wrapping scaffold of the meniscus model by using two suture techniques, the all-inside-repair (AIR) for the posterior horn, and the outside-in-refixation (OIR) for the anterior horn and the middle part. This meniscus model for replacing torn menisci is a promising approach to be further optimized regarding vascularization, biochemical and biomechanical stimuli. N2 - Das Knie ist ein komplex zusammengesetztes Gelenk mit zwei C-förmigen Keilen aus Bindegewebsknorpel, die Menisken. Sie sorgen für die mechanische Belastbarkeit des Knies, wodurch der Gelenksknorpel geschützt wird. Aufgrund des limitierten Heilungspotentials beeinträchtigen Meniskusverletzungen nicht nur den Meniskus selbst, sondern schädigen auch das Gelenksgleichgewicht und führen zu sekundärer Osteoarthritis. Der Meniskus wurde in seiner Anatomie, Struktur und Meniskusmarkern wie Aggrekan, Kollagen I und Kollagen II charakterisiert. Die Komponenten von Meniskus Tissue Engineering, Zellen, Kollagen I Materialien, biochemische und biomechanische Stimuli wurden untersucht. Meniskuszellen (MCs) wurden aus Meniskus isoliert, mesenchymale Stammzellen (MSCs) aus Knochenmark und dermale mikrovaskuläre Endothelzellen (d-mvECs) aus Vorhautbiopsien. Für das humane (h) Meniskus-Modell wurde die keilförmige Kompression eines hMSC-beladenen Kollagen I Gels erfolgreich etabliert. Während drei Wochen statischer Kultur führte der biochemische Stimulus transformierender Wachs-tumsfaktor beta-3 (TGF beta-3) zu einer kompakten Kollagenstruktur. An Tag 21 zeigte dieses Meniskus-Modell eine hohe metabolische Aktivität und Matrixumbau durch die Detektion von Matrix-Metalloproteasen. Der Bindegewebsknorpel wurde durch immunhistochemische Detektion der Meniskusmarker, einem signifikanten GAG/DNA Anstieg und erhöhter Kompressionseigenschaften bestätigt. Für weitere Verbesserungen wurden biomechanische Stimulierungssysteme mittels Kompression und hydrostatischen Druck aufgebaut. Als Vaskularisierungsansatz führte die direkte Stimulierung mit Ciclopirox Olamine (CPX) sogar in Abwesenheit von Helferzellen wie MSCs zu einem erhöhten Sprouting der hd-mvEC Spheroide. Zweitens wurde ein hMSC/hd-mvEC Sheet mithilfe eines Temperatur-abhängigen Verfahrens produziert und auf das keilförmige Meniskus-Modell transferiert. Drittens wurde ein vaskularisiertes Biomaterial (BioVaSc-TERM) mit hd-mvECs besiedelt, wodurch ein vitales Gefäßystem bereitgestellt wurde. Die vaskularisierte BioVaSc-TERM wurde als Hülle des Meniskus-Modells unter der Verwendung von zwei Nahttechniken vorgeschlagen: die All-Inside-Repair (AIR) für das Hinterhorn und die Outside-In-Refixation (OIR) für das Vorderhorn und den mittleren Teil. Dieses Meniskus-Modell ist ein vielversprechender Ansatz für den Meniskusersatz, um in Vaskularisierung, biochemischer und biomechanischer Stimuli weiter optimiert zu werden. KW - Meniskus KW - Tissue Engineering KW - Regenerative Medizin KW - Meniskusimplantat KW - meniscus implant KW - Tissue Engineering KW - tissue engineering KW - vascularization KW - Vaskularisierung Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-184326 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Lotz, C. A1 - Kiesewetter, L. A1 - Schmid, F. F. A1 - Hansmann, J. A1 - Walles, H. A1 - Groeber-Becker, F. T1 - Replacing the Draize eye test: impedance spectroscopy as a 3R method to discriminate between all GHS categories for eye irritation JF - Scientific Reports N2 - Highly invasive animal based test procedures for risk assessment such as the Draize eye test are under increasing criticism due to poor transferability for the human organism and animal-welfare concerns. However, besides all efforts, the Draize eye test is still not completely replaced by alternative animal-free methods. To develop an in vitro test to identify all categories of eye irritation, we combined organotypic cornea models based on primary human cells with an electrical readout system that measures the impedance of the test models. First, we showed that employing a primary human cornea epithelial cell based model is advantageous in native marker expression to the primary human epidermal keratinocytes derived models. Secondly, by employing a non-destructive measuring system based on impedance spectroscopy, we could increase the sensitivity of the test system. Thereby, all globally harmonized systems categories of eye irritation could be identified by repeated measurements over a period of 7 days. Based on a novel prediction model we achieved an accuracy of 78% with a reproducibility of 88.9% to determine all three categories of eye irritation in one single test. This could pave the way according to the 3R principle to replace the Draize eye test. KW - biological models KW - electrical and electronic engineering KW - regenerative medicine KW - tissue engineering KW - toxicology Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-177492 VL - 8 IS - 15049 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Moll, Corinna A1 - Reboredo, Jenny A1 - Schwarz, Thomas A1 - Appelt, Antje A1 - Schürlein, Sebastian A1 - Walles, Heike A1 - Nietzer, Sarah T1 - Tissue Engineering of a Human 3D in vitro Tumor Test System JF - Journal of Visualized Experiments N2 - Cancer is one of the leading causes of death worldwide. Current therapeutic strategies are predominantly developed in 2D culture systems, which inadequately reflect physiological conditions in vivo. Biological 3D matrices provide cells an environment in which cells can self-organize, allowing the study of tissue organization and cell differentiation. Such scaffolds can be seeded with a mixture of different cell types to study direct 3D cell-cell-interactions. To mimic the 3D complexity of cancer tumors, our group has developed a 3D in vitro tumor test system. Our 3D tissue test system models the in vivo situation of malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors (MPNSTs), which we established with our decellularized porcine jejunal segment derived biological vascularized scaffold (BioVaSc). In our model, we reseeded a modified BioVaSc matrix with primary fibroblasts, microvascular endothelial cells (mvECs) and the S462 tumor cell line For static culture, the vascular structure of the BioVaSc is removed and the remaining scaffold is cut open on one side (Small Intestinal Submucosa SIS-Muc). The resulting matrix is then fixed between two metal rings (cell crowns). Another option is to culture the cell-seeded SIS-Muc in a flow bioreactor system that exposes the cells to shear stress. Here, the bioreactor is connected to a peristaltic pump in a self-constructed incubator. A computer regulates the arterial oxygen and nutrient supply via parameters such as blood pressure, temperature, and flow rate. This setup allows for a dynamic culture with either pressure-regulated pulsatile or constant flow. In this study, we could successfully establish both a static and dynamic 3D culture system for MPNSTs. The ability to model cancer tumors in a more natural 3D environment will enable the discovery, testing, and validation of future pharmaceuticals in a human-like model. KW - bioengineering KW - biomedical engineering KW - tissue engineering KW - biotechnology KW - cultured KW - tumor cells KW - cell culture KW - 3D in vitro models KW - bioreactor KW - dynamic culture conditions KW - tumor test system KW - primary cell isolation KW - BioVaSc KW - decellularization KW - equipment and supplies KW - cellular microenvironment KW - culture techniques KW - cell engineering KW - anatomy KW - physiology KW - molecular biology KW - cellular biology Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-132277 UR - http://www.jove.com/video/50460 VL - 78 IS - e50460 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Pereira, A. R. A1 - Trivanović, D. A1 - Herrmann, M. T1 - Approaches to mimic the complexity of the skeletal mesenchymal stem/stromal cell niche in vitro JF - European Cells and Materials N2 - Mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs) are an essential element of most modern tissue engineering and regenerative medicine approaches due to their multipotency and immunoregulatory functions. Despite the prospective value of MSCs for the clinics, the stem cells community is questioning their developmental origin, in vivo localization, identification, and regenerative potential after several years of far-reaching research in the field. Although several major progresses have been made in mimicking the complexity of the MSC niche in vitro, there is need for comprehensive studies of fundamental mechanisms triggered by microenvironmental cues before moving to regenerative medicine cell therapy applications. The present comprehensive review extensively discusses the microenvironmental cues that influence MSC phenotype and function in health and disease – including cellular, chemical and physical interactions. The most recent and relevant illustrative examples of novel bioengineering approaches to mimic biological, chemical, and mechanical microenvironmental signals present in the native MSC niche are summarized, with special emphasis on the forefront techniques to achieve bio-chemical complexity and dynamic cultures. In particular, the skeletal MSC niche and applications focusing on the bone regenerative potential of MSC are addressed. The aim of the review was to recognize the limitations of the current MSC niche in vitro models and to identify potential opportunities to fill the bridge between fundamental science and clinical application of MSCs. KW - Mesenchymal stem/stromal cells KW - skeletal progenitor cells KW - niche KW - in vitro models KW - bone KW - tissue engineering Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-268823 SN - 1473-2262 VL - 37 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Righesso, L. A. R. A1 - Terekhov, M. A1 - Götz, H. A1 - Ackermann, M. A1 - Emrich, T. A1 - Schreiber, L. M. A1 - Müller, W. E. G. A1 - Jung, J. A1 - Rojas, J. P. A1 - Al-Nawas, B. T1 - Dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging for monitoring neovascularization during bone regeneration — a randomized in vivo study in rabbits JF - Clinical Oral Investigations N2 - Objectives Micro-computed tomography (μ-CT) and histology, the current gold standard methods for assessing the formation of new bone and blood vessels, are invasive and/or destructive. With that in mind, a more conservative tool, dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI), was tested for its accuracy and reproducibility in monitoring neovascularization during bone regeneration. Additionally, the suitability of blood perfusion as a surrogate of the efficacy of osteoplastic materials was evaluated. Materials and methods Sixteen rabbits were used and equally divided into four groups, according to the time of euthanasia (2, 3, 4, and 6 weeks after surgery). The animals were submitted to two 8-mm craniotomies that were filled with blood or autogenous bone. Neovascularization was assessed in vivo through DCE-MRI, and bone regeneration, ex vivo, through μ-CT and histology. Results The defects could be consistently identified, and their blood perfusion measured through DCE-MRI, there being statistically significant differences within the blood clot group between 3 and 6 weeks (p = 0.029), and between the former and autogenous bone at six weeks (p = 0.017). Nonetheless, no significant correlations between DCE-MRI findings on neovascularization and μ-CT (r =−0.101, 95% CI [−0.445; 0.268]) or histology (r = 0.305, 95% CI [−0.133; 0.644]) findings on bone regeneration were observed. Conclusions These results support the hypothesis that DCE-MRI can be used to monitor neovascularization but contradict the premise that it could predict bone regeneration as well. KW - animal experimentation KW - bone regeneration KW - multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging KW - neovascularization, physiologic KW - tissue engineering KW - translational medical research Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-307614 SN - 1432-6981 SN - 1436-3771 VL - 25 IS - 10 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schmalzl, Jonas A1 - Plumhoff, Piet A1 - Gilbert, Fabian A1 - Gohlke, Frank A1 - Konrads, Christian A1 - Brunner, Ulrich A1 - Jakob, Franz A1 - Ebert, Regina A1 - Steinert, Andre F. T1 - Tendon-derived stem cells from the long head of the biceps tendon JF - Bone & Joint Research N2 - Objectives The long head of the biceps (LHB) is often resected in shoulder surgery and could therefore serve as a cell source for tissue engineering approaches in the shoulder. However, whether it represents a suitable cell source for regenerative approaches, both in the inflamed and non-inflamed states, remains unclear. In the present study, inflamed and native human LHBs were comparatively characterized for features of regeneration. Methods In total, 22 resected LHB tendons were classified into inflamed samples (n = 11) and non-inflamed samples (n = 11). Proliferation potential and specific marker gene expression of primary LHB-derived cell cultures were analyzed. Multipotentiality, including osteogenic, adipogenic, chondrogenic, and tenogenic differentiation potential of both groups were compared under respective lineage-specific culture conditions. Results Inflammation does not seem to affect the proliferation rate of the isolated tendon-derived stem cells (TDSCs) and the tenogenic marker gene expression. Cells from both groups showed an equivalent osteogenic, adipogenic, chondrogenic and tenogenic differentiation potential in histology and real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis. Conclusion These results suggest that the LHB tendon might be a suitable cell source for regenerative approaches, both in inflamed and non-inflamed states. The LHB with and without tendinitis has been characterized as a novel source of TDSCs, which might facilitate treatment of degeneration and induction of regeneration in shoulder surgery. KW - biceps tendon KW - tendon-derived stem cell KW - mesenchymal stem cell KW - tissue engineering KW - shoulder Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-200370 VL - 8 IS - 9 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schmidt, Stefanie A1 - Abinzano, Florencia A1 - Mensinga, Anneloes A1 - Teßmar, Jörg A1 - Groll, Jürgen A1 - Malda, Jos A1 - Levato, Riccardo A1 - Blunk, Torsten T1 - Differential production of cartilage ECM in 3D agarose constructs by equine articular cartilage progenitor cells and mesenchymal stromal cells JF - International Journal of Molecular Sciences N2 - Identification of articular cartilage progenitor cells (ACPCs) has opened up new opportunities for cartilage repair. These cells may be used as alternatives for or in combination with mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) in cartilage engineering. However, their potential needs to be further investigated, since only a few studies have compared ACPCs and MSCs when cultured in hydrogels. Therefore, in this study, we compared chondrogenic differentiation of equine ACPCs and MSCs in agarose constructs as monocultures and as zonally layered co-cultures under both normoxic and hypoxic conditions. ACPCs and MSCs exhibited distinctly differential production of the cartilaginous extracellular matrix (ECM). For ACPC constructs, markedly higher glycosaminoglycan (GAG) contents were determined by histological and quantitative biochemical evaluation, both in normoxia and hypoxia. Differential GAG production was also reflected in layered co-culture constructs. For both cell types, similar staining for type II collagen was detected. However, distinctly weaker staining for undesired type I collagen was observed in the ACPC constructs. For ACPCs, only very low alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity, a marker of terminal differentiation, was determined, in stark contrast to what was found for MSCs. This study underscores the potential of ACPCs as a promising cell source for cartilage engineering. KW - ACPC KW - chondroprogenitors KW - tissue engineering KW - MSC KW - agarose KW - hypoxia KW - ECM KW - co-culture KW - zonal KW - cartilage Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-236180 SN - 1422-0067 VL - 21 IS - 19 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Suliman, Salwa A1 - Sun, Yang A1 - Pedersen, Torbjorn O. A1 - Xue, Ying A1 - Nickel, Joachim A1 - Waag, Thilo A1 - Finne-Wistrand, Anna A1 - Steinmüller-Nethl, Doris A1 - Krueger, Anke A1 - Costea, Daniela E. A1 - Mustafa, Kamal T1 - In vivo host response and degradation of copolymer scaffolds functionalized with nanodiamonds and bone morphogenetic protein 2 JF - Advanced Healthcare Materials N2 - The aim is to evaluate the effect of modifying poly[(L-lactide)-co-(epsilon-caprolactone)] scaffolds (PLCL) with nanodiamonds (nDP) or with nDP+physisorbed BMP-2 (nDP+BMP-2) on in vivo host tissue response and degradation. The scaffolds are implanted subcutaneously in Balb/c mice and retrieved after 1, 8, and 27 weeks. Molecular weight analysis shows that modified scaffolds degrade faster than the unmodified. Gene analysis at week 1 shows highest expression of proinflammatory markers around nDP scaffolds; although the presence of inflammatory cells and foreign body giant cells is more prominent around the PLCL. Tissue regeneration markers are highly expressed in the nDP+BMP-2 scaffolds at week 8. A fibrous capsule is detectable by week 8, thinnest around nDP scaffolds and at week 27 thickest around PLCL scaffolds. mRNA levels of ALP, COL1 alpha 2, and ANGPT1 are signifi cantly upregulating in the nDP+BMP-2 scaffolds at week 1 with ectopic bone seen at week 8. Even when almost 90% of the scaffold is degraded at week 27, nDP are observable at implantation areas without adverse effects. In conclusion, modifying PLCL scaffolds with nDP does not aggravate the host response and physisorbed BMP-2 delivery attenuates infl ammation while lowering the dose of BMP-2 to a relatively safe and economical level. KW - inflammatory response KW - biocompatibility KW - BMP-2 delivery KW - inflammation KW - tissue engineering Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-189764 VL - 5 IS - 6 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Thibaudeau, Laure A1 - Taubenberger, Anna V. A1 - Holzapfel, Boris M. A1 - Quent, Verena M. A1 - Fuehrmann, Tobias A1 - Hesami, Parisa A1 - Brown, Toby D. A1 - Dalton, Paul D. A1 - Power, Carl A. A1 - Hollier, Brett G. A1 - Hutmacher, Dietmar W. T1 - A tissue-engineered humanized xenograft model of human breast cancer metastasis to bone JF - Disease Models & Mechanisms N2 - The skeleton is a preferred homing site for breast cancer metastasis. To date, treatment options for patients with bone metastases are mostly palliative and the disease is still incurable. Indeed, key mechanisms involved in breast cancer osteotropism are still only partially understood due to the lack of suitable animal models to mimic metastasis of human tumor cells to a human bone microenvironment. In the presented study, we investigate the use of a human tissue-engineered bone construct to develop a humanized xenograft model of breast cancer-induced bone metastasis in a murine host. Primary human osteoblastic cell-seeded melt electrospun scaffolds in combination with recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein 7 were implanted subcutaneously in non-obese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficient mice. The tissue-engineered constructs led to the formation of a morphologically intact 'organ' bone incorporating a high amount of mineralized tissue, live osteocytes and bone marrow spaces. The newly formed bone was largely humanized, as indicated by the incorporation of human bone cells and human-derived matrix proteins. After intracardiac injection, the dissemination of luciferase-expressing human breast cancer cell lines to the humanized bone ossicles was detected by bioluminescent imaging. Histological analysis revealed the presence of metastases with clear osteolysis in the newly formed bone. Thus, human tissue-engineered bone constructs can be applied efficiently as a target tissue for human breast cancer cells injected into the blood circulation and replicate the osteolytic phenotype associated with breast cancer-induced bone lesions. In conclusion, we have developed an appropriate model for investigation of species-specific mechanisms of human breast cancer-related bone metastasis in vivo. KW - breast cancer KW - bone metastasis KW - humanized xenograft model KW - melt electrospinning KW - tissue engineering KW - osteotropism KW - in vivo KW - stem-cell niche KW - human prostate-cancer KW - morphogenetic protein KW - osteoprogenitor cells KW - endochondral ossification KW - mouse model KW - trabecular bone KW - calcium phosphate KW - skeletal metastases Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-117466 VL - 7 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Thibaudeau, Laure A1 - Taubenberger, Anna V. A1 - Theodoropoulos, Christina A1 - Holzapfel, Boris M. A1 - Ramuz, Olivier A1 - Straub, Melanie A1 - Hutmacher, Dietmar W. T1 - New mechanistic insights of integrin β1 in breast cancer bone colonization JF - Oncotarget N2 - Bone metastasis is a frequent and life-threatening complication of breast cancer. The molecular mechanisms supporting the establishment of breast cancer cells in the skeleton are still not fully understood, which may be attributed to the lack of suitable models that interrogate interactions between human breast cancer cells and the bone microenvironment. Although it is well-known that integrins mediate adhesion of malignant cells to bone extracellular matrix, their role during bone colonization remains unclear. Here, the role of β1 integrins in bone colonization was investigated using tissue-engineered humanized in vitro and in vivo bone models. In vitro, bone-metastatic breast cancer cells with suppressed integrin β1 expression showed reduced attachment, spreading, and migration within human bone matrix compared to control cells. Cell proliferation in vitro was not affected by β1 integrin knockdown, yet tumor growth in vivo within humanized bone microenvironments was significantly inhibited upon β1 integrin suppression, as revealed by quantitative in/ex vivo fluorescence imaging and histological analysis. Tumor cells invaded bone marrow spaces in the humanized bone and formed osteolytic lesions; osteoclastic bone resorption was, however, not reduced by β1 integrin knockdown. Taken together, we demonstrate that β1 integrins have a pivotal role in bone colonization using unique tissue-engineered humanized bone models. KW - tissue engineering KW - bone colonization KW - breast cancer KW - β1 integrin KW - humanized bone models Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-175432 VL - 6 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Tylek, Tina A1 - Schilling, Tatjana A1 - Schlegelmilch, Katrin A1 - Ries, Maximilian A1 - Rudert, Maximilian A1 - Jakob, Franz A1 - Groll, Jürgen T1 - Platelet lysate outperforms FCS and human serum for co-culture of primary human macrophages and hMSCs JF - Scientific Reports N2 - In vitro co-cultures of different primary human cell types are pivotal for the testing and evaluation of biomaterials under conditions that are closer to the human in vivo situation. Especially co-cultures of macrophages and mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are of interest, as they are both present and involved in tissue regeneration and inflammatory reactions and play crucial roles in the immediate inflammatory reactions and the onset of regenerative processes, thus reflecting the decisive early phase of biomaterial contact with the host. A co-culture system of these cell types might thus allow for the assessment of the biocompatibility of biomaterials. The establishment of such a co-culture is challenging due to the different in vitro cell culture conditions. For human macrophages, medium is usually supplemented with human serum (hS), whereas hMSC culture is mostly performed using fetal calf serum (FCS), and these conditions are disadvantageous for the respective other cell type. We demonstrate that human platelet lysate (hPL) can replace hS in macrophage cultivation and appears to be the best option for co-cultivation of human macrophages with hMSCs. In contrast to FCS and hS, hPL maintained the phenotype of both cell types, comparable to that of their respective standard culture serum, as well as the percentage of each cell population. Moreover, the expression profile and phagocytosis activity of macrophages was similar to hS. KW - biomaterials – cells KW - tissue engineering Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-229174 VL - 9 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Votteler, Miriam A1 - Carvajal Berrio, Daniel A. A1 - Pudlas, Marieke A1 - Walles, Heike A1 - Schenke-Layland, Katja T1 - Non-contact, Label-free Monitoring of Cells and Extracellular Matrix using Raman Spectroscopy JF - Journal of Visual Expression N2 - Non-destructive, non-contact and label-free technologies to monitor cell and tissue cultures are needed in the field of biomedical research.1-5 However, currently available routine methods require processing steps and alter sample integrity. Raman spectroscopy is a fast method that enables the measurement of biological samples without the need for further processing steps. This laser-based technology detects the inelastic scattering of monochromatic light.6 As every chemical vibration is assigned to a specific Raman band (wavenumber in cm-1), each biological sample features a typical spectral pattern due to their inherent biochemical composition.7-9 Within Raman spectra, the peak intensities correlate with the amount of the present molecular bonds.1 Similarities and differences of the spectral data sets can be detected by employing a multivariate analysis (e.g. principal component analysis (PCA)).10 Here, we perform Raman spectroscopy of living cells and native tissues. Cells are either seeded on glass bottom dishes or kept in suspension under normal cell culture conditions (37 °C, 5% CO2) before measurement. Native tissues are dissected and stored in phosphate buffered saline (PBS) at 4 °C prior measurements. Depending on our experimental set up, we then either focused on the cell nucleus or extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins such as elastin and collagen. For all studies, a minimum of 30 cells or 30 random points of interest within the ECM are measured. Data processing steps included background subtraction and normalization. KW - tissue engineering KW - label-free analysis KW - raman spectroscopy KW - bioengineering KW - living cells KW - extracellular matrix Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-124569 VL - 63 IS - e3977 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wagenbrenner, Mike A1 - Mayer-Wagner, Susanne A1 - Rudert, Maximilian A1 - Holzapfel, Boris Michael A1 - Weissenberger, Manuel T1 - Combinations of hydrogels and mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) for cartilage tissue engineering — a review of the literature JF - Gels N2 - Cartilage offers limited regenerative capacity. Cell-based approaches have emerged as a promising alternative in the treatment of cartilage defects and osteoarthritis. Due to their easy accessibility, abundancy, and chondrogenic potential mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) offer an attractive cell source. MSCs are often combined with natural or synthetic hydrogels providing tunable biocompatibility, biodegradability, and enhanced cell functionality. In this review, we focused on the different advantages and disadvantages of various natural, synthetic, and modified hydrogels. We examined the different combinations of MSC-subpopulations and hydrogels used for cartilage engineering in preclinical and clinical studies and reviewed the effects of added growth factors or gene transfer on chondrogenesis in MSC-laden hydrogels. The aim of this review is to add to the understanding of the disadvantages and advantages of various combinations of MSC-subpopulations, growth factors, gene transfers, and hydrogels in cartilage engineering. KW - hydrogels KW - osteoarthritis KW - cartilage defects KW - MSCs KW - cartilage regeneration KW - tissue engineering Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-250177 SN - 2310-2861 VL - 7 IS - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wagenbrenner, Mike A1 - Poker, Konrad A1 - Heinz, Tizian A1 - Herrmann, Marietta A1 - Horas, Konstantin A1 - Ebert, Regina A1 - Mayer-Wagner, Susanne A1 - Holzapfel, Boris M. A1 - Rudert, Maximilian A1 - Steinert, Andre F. A1 - Weißenberger, Manuel T1 - Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) isolated from various tissues of the human arthritic knee joint possess similar multipotent differentiation potential JF - Applied Sciences N2 - (1) Background: The mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) of different tissue origins are applied in cell-based chondrogenic regeneration. However, there is a lack of comparability determining the most suitable cell source for the tissue engineering (TE) of cartilage. The purpose of this study was to compare the in vitro chondrogenic potential of MSC-like cells from different tissue sources (bone marrow, meniscus, anterior cruciate ligament, synovial membrane, and the infrapatellar fat pad removed during total knee arthroplasty (TKA)) and define which cell source is best suited for cartilage regeneration. (2) Methods: MSC-like cells were isolated from five donors and expanded using adherent monolayer cultures. Differentiation was induced by culture media containing specific growth factors. Transforming growth factor (TGF)-ß1 was used as the growth factor for chondrogenic differentiation. Osteogenesis and adipogenesis were induced in monolayer cultures for 27 days, while pellet cell cultures were used for chondrogenesis for 21 days. Control cultures were maintained under the same conditions. After, the differentiation period samples were analyzed, using histological and immunohistochemical staining, as well as molecularbiological analysis by RT-PCR, to assess the expression of specific marker genes. (3) Results: Plastic-adherent growth and in vitro trilineage differentiation capacity of all isolated cells were proven. Flow cytometry revealed the clear co-expression of surface markers CD44, CD73, CD90, and CD105 on all isolated cells. Adipogenesis was validated through the formation of lipid droplets, while osteogenesis was proven by the formation of calcium deposits within differentiated cell cultures. The formation of proteoglycans was observed during chondrogenesis in pellet cultures, with immunohistochemical staining revealing an increased relative gene expression of collagen type II. RT-PCR proved an elevated expression of specific marker genes after successful differentiation, with no significant differences regarding different cell source of native tissue. (4) Conclusions: Irrespective of the cell source of native tissue, all MSC-like cells showed multipotent differentiation potential in vitro. The multipotent differentiation capacity did not differ significantly, and chondrogenic differentiation was proven in all pellet cultures. Therefore, cell suitability for cell-based cartilage therapies and tissue engineering is given for various tissue origins that are routinely removed during total knee arthroplasty (TKA). This study might provide essential information for the clinical tool of cell harvesting, leading to more flexibility in cell availability. KW - knee joint KW - MSCs KW - cellular origin KW - cartilage regeneration KW - tissue engineering KW - cell-based therapies KW - osteoarthritis Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-262334 SN - 2076-3417 VL - 12 IS - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Waxman, Susannah A1 - Strzalkowska, Alicja A1 - Wang, Chao A1 - Loewen, Ralitsa A1 - Dang, Yalong A1 - Loewen, Nils A. T1 - Tissue-engineered anterior segment eye cultures demonstrate hallmarks of conventional organ culture JF - Graefe’s Archive for Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology N2 - Background Glaucoma is a blinding disease largely caused by dysregulation of outflow through the trabecular meshwork (TM), resulting in elevated intraocular pressure (IOP). We hypothesized that transplanting TM cells into a decellularized, tissue-engineered anterior segment eye culture could restore the outflow structure and function. Methods Porcine eyes were decellularized with freeze–thaw cycles and perfusion of surfactant. We seeded control scaffolds with CrFK cells transduced with lentiviral vectors to stably express eGFP and compared them to scaffolds seeded with primary TM cells as well as to normal, unaltered eyes. We tracked the repopulation behavior, performed IOP maintenance challenges, and analyzed the histology. Results Transplanted cells localized to the TM and progressively infiltrated the extracellular matrix, reaching a distribution comparable to normal, unaltered eyes. After a perfusion rate challenge to mimic a glaucomatous pressure elevation, transplanted and normal eyes reestablished a normal intraocular pressure (transplanted = 16.5 ± 0.9 mmHg, normal = 16.9 ± 0.9). However, eyes reseeded with eGFP-expressing CrFK cells could not regulate IOP, remaining high and unstable (27.0 ± 6.2 mmHg) instead. Conclusion Tissue-engineered anterior segment scaffolds can serve as readily available, scalable ocular perfusion cultures. This could reduce dependency on scarce donor globes in outflow research and may allow engineering perfusion cultures with specific geno- and phenotypes. KW - ocular anterior segment perfusion culture KW - tissue engineering KW - aqueous humor outflow KW - trabecular meshwork Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-323845 VL - 261 IS - 5 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Xu, Jietao A1 - Fahmy-Garcia, Shorouk A1 - Wesdorp, Marinus A. A1 - Kops, Nicole A1 - Forte, Lucia A1 - De Luca, Claudio A1 - Misciagna, Massimiliano Maraglino A1 - Dolcini, Laura A1 - Filardo, Giuseppe A1 - Labberté, Margot A1 - Vancíková, Karin A1 - Kok, Joeri A1 - van Rietbergen, Bert A1 - Nickel, Joachim A1 - Farrell, Eric A1 - Brama, Pieter A. J. A1 - van Osch, Gerjo J. V. M. T1 - Effectiveness of BMP-2 and PDGF-BB adsorption onto a collagen/collagen-magnesium-hydroxyapatite scaffold in weight-bearing and non-weight-bearing osteochondral defect bone repair: in vitro, ex vivo and in vivo evaluation JF - Journal of Functional Biomaterials N2 - Despite promising clinical results in osteochondral defect repair, a recently developed bi-layered collagen/collagen-magnesium-hydroxyapatite scaffold has demonstrated less optimal subchondral bone repair. This study aimed to improve the bone repair potential of this scaffold by adsorbing bone morphogenetic protein 2 (BMP-2) and/or platelet-derived growth factor-BB (PDGF-BB) onto said scaffold. The in vitro release kinetics of BMP-2/PDGF-BB demonstrated that PDGF-BB was burst released from the collagen-only layer, whereas BMP-2 was largely retained in both layers. Cell ingrowth was enhanced by BMP-2/PDFG-BB in a bovine osteochondral defect ex vivo model. In an in vivo semi-orthotopic athymic mouse model, adding BMP-2 or PDGF-BB increased tissue repair after four weeks. After eight weeks, most defects were filled with bone tissue. To further investigate the promising effect of BMP-2, a caprine bilateral stifle osteochondral defect model was used where defects were created in weight-bearing femoral condyle and non-weight-bearing trochlear groove locations. After six months, the adsorption of BMP-2 resulted in significantly less bone repair compared with scaffold-only in the femoral condyle defects and a trend to more bone repair in the trochlear groove. Overall, the adsorption of BMP-2 onto a Col/Col-Mg-HAp scaffold reduced bone formation in weight-bearing osteochondral defects, but not in non-weight-bearing osteochondral defects. KW - tissue engineering KW - regenerative medicine KW - osteochondral lesion KW - biocompatible materials KW - bone morphogenetic proteins KW - platelet-derived growth factor KW - animal model KW - weight-bearing Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-304019 SN - 2079-4983 VL - 14 IS - 2 ER -