4.3 Article

Bioengineering functional human aortic vascular smooth-muscle strips in vitro

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY AND APPLIED BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 50, Issue -, Pages 155-163

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1042/BA20070139

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The contraction and relaxation of VSM (vascular smooth muscle) are responsible for the maintenance of vascular tone, which is a major determinant of blood pressure. However, the molecular events leading to the contraction and relaxation of VSM are poorly under, stood. The development of three-dimensional bioengineered tissues provides an opportunity to investigate the molecular events controlling vascular tone in vitro. In the present study we used fibrin-gel casting to bio-engineer functional VSM strips from primary human aortic VSM cells. Our bioengineered VSM strips are functionally similar to VSM in vivo and remained viable in culture for up to 5 weeks. VSM strips demonstrate spontaneous basal tone and can generate an active force (contraction) of up to 85.2 mu N on stimulation with phenylephrine. Bioengineered VSM strips exhibited Ca(2+)-dependent contraction and calcium-independent relaxation. The development of functional biciengineered VSM tissue provides a new in vitro model system that can be used to investigate the molecular events controlling vascular tone.

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