Artificial blood vessels developed in
the lab can grow with the recipient. One of the greatest challenges in
vessel bioengineering is designing a vessel that will grow with its new owner.
In this study, University of
Minnesota Department of Biomedical Engineering Professor Robert Tranquillo and
his colleagues generated vessel-like tubes in the lab from a post-natal donor's
skin cells and then removed the cells to minimize the chance of rejection. This
also means the vessels can be stored and implanted when they are needed,
without the need for customized cell growth of the recipient. When implanted in
a lamb, the tube was then repopulated by the recipient's own cells allowing it
to grow."This might be the first time we have an 'off-the-shelf' material
that doctors can implant in a patient, and it can grow in the body,"
Tranquillo said. "In the future, this could potentially mean one surgery
instead of five or more surgeries that some children with heart defects have
before adulthood." To develop the material for this study, researchers
combined sheep skin cells in a gelatin-like material, called fibrin, in the
form of a tube and then rhythmically pumped in nutrients necessary for cell
growth using a bioreactor for up to five weeks. The pumping bioreactor provided
both nutrients and "exercise" to strengthen and stiffen the tube. The
bioreactor, developed with Zeeshan Syedain, a senior research associate in
Tranquillo's lab, was a key component of developing the bioartificial vessel to
be stronger than a native artery so it wouldn't burst in the patient.
The researchers then used special
detergents to wash away all the sheep cells, leaving behind a cell-free matrix
that does not cause immune reaction when implanted. When the vessel graft
replaced a part of the pulmonary artery in three lambs at five weeks of age,
the implanted vessels were soon populated by the lambs' own cells, causing the
vessel to bend its shape and grow together with the recipient until adulthood. "What's
important is that when the graft was implanted in the sheep, the cells
repopulated the blood vessel tube matrix," Tranquillo said. "If the
cells don't repopulate the graft, the vessel can't grow. This is the perfect
marriage between tissue engineering and regenerative medicine where tissue is
grown in the lab and then, after implanting the decellularized tissue, the
natural processes of the recipient's body makes it a living tissue again."At
50 weeks of age, the sheep's blood vessel graft had increased 56 percent in
diameter and the amount of blood that could be pumped through the vessel
increased 216 percent. The collagen protein also had increased 465 percent,
proving that the vessel had not merely stretched but had actually grown. No
adverse effects such as clotting, vessel narrowing, or calcification were
observed.
BY
CHANDRASEKHARAN
III
B.Sc.,
DEPARTMENT OF BIOCHEMISTRY
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