4.7 Article

An arteriovenous loop in a protected space generates a permanent, highly vascular, tissue-engineered construct

Journal

FASEB JOURNAL
Volume 21, Issue 2, Pages 511-522

Publisher

FEDERATION AMER SOC EXP BIOL
DOI: 10.1096/fj.06-6614com

Keywords

chamber space; macrovascular loop; angiogenesis; growth and remodeling; in vivo tissue engineering

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A major obstacle to 3-dimensional tissue engineering is incorporation of a functional vascular supply to support the expanding new tissue. This is overcome in an in vivo intrinsic vascularization model where an arteriovenous loop (AVL) is placed in a noncollapsible space protected by a polycarbonate chamber. Vascular development and hypoxia were examined from 3 days to 112 days by vascular casting, morphometric, and morphological techniques to understand the model's vascular growth and remodeling parameters for tissue engineering purposes. At 3 days a fibrin exudate surrounded the AVL, providing a scaffold to migrating inflammatory, endothelial, and mesenchymal cells. Capillaries formed between 3 and 7 days. Hypoxia and cell proliferation were maximal at 7 days, followed by a peak in percent vascular volume at 10 days (23.20 +/- 3.14% compared with 3.59 +/- 2.68% at 3 days, P < 0.001). Maximal apoptosis was observed at 112 days. The protected space and spontaneous microcirculatory development in this model suggest it would be applicable for in vivo tissue engineering. A temporal window in a period of intense angiogenesis at 7 to 10 days is optimal for exogenous cell seeding and survival in the chamber, potentially enabling specific tissue outcomes to be achieved.

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