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Tissue Engineering

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Title: Tissue Engineering


1
Tissue Engineering
  • Goal and history
  • Natural examples of tissue engineering
  • Examples of tissue engineering
  • Survey of applications
  • Case study of small-diameter vascular grafts

2
Some Goals of Tissue Engineering
  • donors ltlt potential recipients

Langer and J. Vacanti Tissue Engineering.
Science 260 920-6, 1993.
3
A Definition
  • Tissue engineering is an interdisciplinary field
    that applies the principles of engineering and
    the life sciences towards the development of
    biological substitutes that restore, maintain, or
    improve tissue function.
  • Langer and J. Vacanti Tissue Engineering.
    Science 260 920-6, 1993.
  • But

4
My definition
  • Making or modifying a tissue for some useful
    purpose.
  • But

5
How to make or modify tissues
  • In vitro tissue engineering
  • In vivo tissue engineering
  • Bone defects
  • Ex vivo tissue engineering
  • Extracorporeal liver support

Langer and J. Vacanti Tissue Engineering.
Science 260 920-6, 1993.
6
History of tissue engineering
  • For modern history (1985-2003)
  • NSF report The Emergence of Tissue Engineering
    as a Research Field.
  • http//www.nsf.gov/pubs/2004/nsf0450/start.htm
  • My summary of the recent history of TE

1980 1990 2000 2010
7
Early tissue engineering
8
Replicating Complex Biological Environments
  • Cell culture
  • Tissue culture
  • Organ culture
  • Organism culture
  • Ecosystem culture

9
Organ Culture A Sister of Tissue Engineering
  • In practice - shared techniques.
  • From a historic perspective - shared goals.

10
Alexis Carrel
  • Pioneering work on cell culture
  • 1912 Nobel Prize for Medicine
  • Technique for vascular anastomosis
  • Enabled vascular grafting and organ
    transplantation
  • Early work on organ storage (e.g., cold storage)
  • Organ culture

11
Carrels Goals for Organ Culture
  • A tool for scientific inquiry- phenomenon of
    regeneration, growth, nutrition, and internal
    secretions could be rendered more comprehensible
    by studies with prolonged organ perfusion.
  • Autografts for clinical use if it were
    possible to culture whole organs, a diseased
    organ or part thereof could be removed, treated
    outside the body, and grafted back into the
    patient.
  • Malinin TI and Lindergh CA Organ culture and
    perfusion by the Carrel method. In Alexis
    Carrel Papers of the Centennial Conference at
    Georgetown University.

12
Carrels Goals for Organ Cultureare also the
goals of TE
  • A tool for scientific inquiry- phenomenon of
    regeneration, growth, nutrition, and internal
    secretions could be rendered more comprehensible
    by studies with prolonged organ perfusion.
  • Auto- or allografts for clinical use if it
    were possible to culture whole organs, a diseased
    organ or part thereof could be removed, treated
    outside the body, and grafted back into the
    patient.
  • Malinin TI and Lindergh CA Organ culture and
    perfusion by the Carrel method. In Alexis
    Carrel Papers of the Centennial Conference at
    Georgetown University.

13
  • Carrel noted that the culture of organs is, from
    a technical point of view, very difficult
  • Contamination

14
  • Carrel noted that the culture of organs is, from
    a technical point of view, very difficult
  • Contamination! But why?

15
  • Carrel noted that the culture of organs is, from
    a technical point of view, very difficult
  • Contamination! But why?
  • Cell culture small distances diffusion OK
  • Organ culture large distances diffusion
    inadequate
  • Need a sterile perfusion system.

16
Interdisciplinary BE Research
  • Charles Lindbergh
  • Engineer
  • 1927
  • 1930

1935
17
Lindbergh Apparatus
  • All glass
  • Semi-closed system
  • Pulsatile flow of liquid is generated by cyclic
    changes in gas pressures in several chambers.

18
Carrel-Lindbergh Organ Culture
  • 1935-9 used to conduct 898 organ perfusion
  • Thyroid
  • 3 Weeks
  • Maintained normal histology
  • Secreted hormone

19
Carrel-Lindbergh Organ Culture
  • Heart
  • Heart removed from refrigerated primate carcasses
  • 90 cadaver hearts responded to perfusion by
    contractions
  • 1hr culture strong A/V contractions
  • gt 1hr frequency and amplitude of contractions
    decreased
  • Perfusion at decreased T ? longer survival ex
    vivo.
  • 37C ? 1 day
  • 22C ? 2 day
  • 12C ? 10 days!

20
Past as Prologue
  • Prediction Organ culture and tissue engineering
    will remain entwined.

21
Organ Culture ?Tissue Eng.
  • Positive control
  • Source of info technical and scientific
  • Alternative route

22
Organ Culture ?Tissue Eng.
  • Organ culture a positive control for in vitro
    TE conditions.

Native tissue ?
Quality
Time
23
Organ Culture ?Tissue Eng.
  • Organ culture a positive control for in vitro
    TE conditions.

Native tissue ?
Quality
Time
24
Organ Culture ?Tissue Eng.
  • Organ culture a positive control for in vitro
    TE conditions.

Native tissue ?
Quality
Time
25
Organ Culture ?Tissue Eng.
  • Organ culture a source of ideas

Native tissue ?
Quality
Time
26
Organ Culture ?Tissue Eng.
  • Organ culture a source of ideas

Native tissue ?
Quality
Time
27
IGF in TE cartilage
28
Tissue Engineering
  • Goal Tissue replacement/repair Science
  • Approaches (in vitro, in vivo, and ex vivo)
  • History
  • Next Natural examples of tissue engineering

29
Natural examples of TE
30
Normal development
31
Alternative development
  • Transgenic animals

gene
32
Alternative development
  • Cloning
  • Tells about the potential of DNA

33
Alternative development
  • Tells about the potential of early embryo cells

34
Embryonic stem cells are totipotent
  • Have potential to differentiate to any cell type
  • Great proliferation potential
  • Can develop teratomas when implanted in vivo

35
Later in development, most/all cells loose this
potential
  • Cell culture
  • Cell transplant studies
  • Implications for tissue engineering
  • Origin of cells
  • Precursor / stem cells
  • Simple division
  • Permanent cells

36
Differentiation and determination
  • Differentiation when a cells expresses outward
    markers of a given cell type. (e.g., mature beta
    cell insulin)
  • Determination - when a cell has committed to a
    particular differentiation fate.

37
Test for determination
  • Figure 21-7. The standard test for cell
    determination. MBC

38
Determination and positional value
http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bookres.fcgi/mbo
c4/ch21f8.gif
39
Normal development
  • Increase in organism size

40
The four essential processes by which a
multicellular organism is made
  • http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bookres.fcgi/mbo
    c4/ch21f1.gif

41
The four essential processes by which a
multicellular organism is made
  • http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bookres.fcgi/mbo
    c4/ch21f1.gif

42
Specialization
Genetic
Environment
  • http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bookres.fcgi/mbo
    c4/ch21f1.gif

http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bookres.fcgi/mbo
c4/ch7f72.jpg
43
Cell interaction
Induction - when one cell/tissue alters the
developmental fate of an adjacent cell or tissue
44
Cell interactions
45
Natural examples of TE
46
Regeneration Liver as a model
47
  • Homeostasis Regulates blood sugar, lipids and
    cholesterol, amino acids.
  • Detoxify remove hormones, hemaglobin, and toxins
    from the blood.
  • Forms of red blood cells in the young embryo.
  • Makes plasma proteins including albumin and
    clotting factors.
  • Stores and makes vitamins

48
Structure of liver
  • Homeostasis Regulates blood sugar, lipids and
    cholesterol, amino acids.
  • Detoxify remove hormones, hemaglobin, and toxins
    from the blood.
  • Forms of red blood cells in the young embryo.
  • 9. Making heparin this is a substance that
    prevents the blood from clotting as it travels
    through the blood system.
  • Makes plasma proteins including albumin and
    clotting factors.
  • Stores and makes

49
The livers regeneration potential
  • Resection studies
  • Transplant studies
  • Dogs
  • Humans
  • Gene defect and rescue studies
  • Mechanism local factor or systemic factor?

50
Symbiotic circulation
51
Hepatocyte growth factor
  • Stimulates hepatocyte proliferation in culture
  • Increased following partial resection of liver
  • A simplified conceptual model
  • Body tissue makes HGF and delivers to circulation
  • Liver tissue removes HGF from circulation
  • Liver grows if HGF gt some value
  • Simple test of conceptual model?

52
Does HGF stimulate liver growth in vivo?
  • HGF ?
  • HGF Collagenase ?

53
Implications of liver regeneration for Tissue
engineering
  • Why even need TE?
  • Massive acute problems
  • Chronic insults

54
Implications of liver regeneration for Tissue
engineering
  • Type of system needed?
  • Massive acute problems
  • Chronic insults

55
Extracorporeal device
  •  Algenix Inc.'s LIVERX2000 System
  • http//biomed.brown.edu/Courses/BI108/BI108_2002_G
    roups/liver/webpage/liverxpg.htm

56
Natural examples of TE
  • Soluble factor (HGF)
  • ECM
  • Negative factors for regen
  • Potential of DNA
  • Differentiation and determination / Plasticity of
    cells.
  • Role of TF (myoD)
  • Role of cell shape
  • Role of cell-cell interactions

57
Wound healing skin as a model system
Scar
Not healing
For a good review of this topics, see Wound
Healing--Aiming for Perfect Skin Regeneration by
Paul Martin http//www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content
/full/276/5309/75
58
Structure of skin
59
Stages of wound healing
  • Fibrin Clot
  • Recruitment of Inflammatory cells
  • Reepithelialization

60
Fibrin Clot
  • Stops bleeding
  • Formation of provisional matrix
  • Source of mitogens and chemotaxic factors
  • PDGF

61
Recruitment of Inflammatory cells
  • Recruited by factors derived from clot and
    infections.
  • Recruitment mediated by endothelial cells.
  • Neutrophils
  • Monocytes
  • Secrete factors that stimulate next step.

62
Reepithelialization
  • Epithelial cells migrate (crawl) into wound
  • Alter integrin expression
  • Secrete proteases
  • t-PA
  • MMPs
  • As horizontal surface area covered, a striated
    epithelium is formed.

63
Better healing
  • Embryonic wounds heal without scar.
  • Why? (environment, tissue, ?)
  • Different mechanism?

64
Embryonic vs. Adult
  • Different mechanism?

65
Molecular mediators of wound healing
  • Transforming growth factor beta
  • Stimulates fibroblasts in the wound to become
    myofibroblasts.

66
Examples of TE skin (science)
67
Tissue engineered skin (clinic)
68
Tissue-engineered skin (clinic)
69
Blood vessel
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