4.8 Article

Highly Elastic Micropatterned Hydrogel for Engineering Functional Cardiac Tissue

期刊

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
卷 23, 期 39, 页码 4950-4959

出版社

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adfm.201300570

关键词

tropoelastin; microfabrication; cardiomyocyte; cell alignment; elasticity

资金

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council
  2. CRC for Polymers
  3. BHP-Billiton Fulbright Scholarship
  4. National Science Foundation [DMR 0847287]
  5. office of Naval Research
  6. National Institutes of Health [HL092836, DE019024, EB012597, AR057837, DE021468, HL099073, EB008392]
  7. Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE)
  8. Australian Research Council
  9. Australian Defense Health Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Heart failure is a major international health issue. Myocardial mass loss and lack of contractility are precursors to heart failure. Surgical demand for effective myocardial repair is tempered by a paucity of appropriate biological materials. These materials should conveniently replicate natural human tissue components, convey persistent elasticity, promote cell attachment, growth and conformability to direct cell orientation and functional performance. Here, microfabrication techniques are applied to recombinant human tropoelastin, the resilience-imparting protein found in all elastic human tissues, to generate photocrosslinked biological materials containing well-defined micropatterns. These highly elastic substrates are then used to engineer biomimetic cardiac tissue constructs. The micropatterned hydrogels, produced through photocrosslinking of methacrylated tropoelastin (MeTro), promote the attachment, spreading, alignment, function, and intercellular communication of cardiomyocytes by providing an elastic mechanical support that mimics their dynamic mechanical properties in vivo. The fabricated MeTro hydrogels also support the synchronous beating of cardiomyocytes in response to electrical field stimulation. These novel engineered micropatterned elastic gels are designed to be amenable to 3D modular assembly and establish a versatile, adaptable foundation for the modeling and regeneration of functional cardiac tissue with potential for application to other elastic tissues.

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