4.7 Article

Microfabricated blood vessels for modeling the vascular transport barrier

Journal

NATURE PROTOCOLS
Volume 14, Issue 5, Pages 1425-1454

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41596-019-0144-8

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [EB00262, EB08396, UH3EB017103, HL115553, K99-CA226366-01A1]
  2. National Science Foundation Center for Engineering MechanoBiology [CMMI15-48571]
  3. Ruth L. Kirchstein National Research Service Award [F32 HL129733]
  4. NIH through the Organ Design and Engineering Training program [T32 EB16652]
  5. Hartwell Foundation
  6. NIH through the Translational Research in Biomaterials Training Program [T32 EB006359]

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The vascular endothelium forms the inner lining of blood vessels and actively regulates vascular permeability in response to chemical and physical stimuli. Understanding the molecular pathways and mechanisms that regulate the permeability of blood vessels is of critical importance for developing therapies for cardiovascular dysfunction and disease. Recently, we developed a novel microfluidic human engineered microvessel (hEMV) platform to enable controlled blood flow through a human endothelial lumen within a physiologic 3D extracellular matrix (ECM) into which pericytes and other stromal cells can be introduced to recapitulate tissue-specific microvascular physiology. This protocol describes how to design and fabricate the silicon hEMV device master molds (takes similar to 1 week) and elastomeric substrates (takes 3 d); how to seed, culture, and apply calibrated fluid shear stress to hEMVs (takes 1-7 d); and how to assess vascular barrier function (takes 1 d) and perform immunofluorescence imaging (takes 3 d).

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