Abstract

Since most of the body’s extracellular matrix (ECM) is composed of collagen and elastin, we believe the choice of these materials is key for the future and promise of tissue engineering. Once it is known how elastin content of ECM guides cellular behavior (in 2D or 3D), one will be able to harness the power of collagen-elastin microenvironments to design and engineer stimuli-responsive tissues. Moreover, the implementation of such matrices to promote endothelial-mesenchymal transition of primary endothelial cells constitutes a powerful tool to engineer 3D tissues. Here, we design a 3D collagen-elastin scaffold to mimic the native ECM of heart valves, by providing the strength of collagen layers, as well as elasticity. Valve interstitial cells (VICs) were encapsulated in the collagen-elastin hydrogels and valve endothelial cells (VECs) cultured onto the surface to create an in vitro 3D VEC-VIC co-culture. Over a seven-day period, VICs had stable expression levels of integrin β1 and F-actin and continuously proliferated, while cell morphology changed to more elongated. VECs maintained endothelial phenotype up to day five, as indicated by low expression of F-actin and integrin β1, while transformed VECs accounted for less than 7% of the total VECs in culture. On day seven, over 20% VECs were transformed to mesenchymal phenotype, indicated by increased actin filaments and higher expression of integrin β1. These findings demonstrate that our 3D collagen-elastin scaffolds provided a novel tool to study cell-cell or cell-matrix interactions in vitro, promoting advances in the current knowledge of valvular endothelial cell mesenchymal transition.

Highlights

  • Heart disease is the most challenging and severe health problem worldwide, accounting for one in seven deaths in the US [1]

  • According to the most updated report from the American Heart Association, the prevalence of valvular heart disease is 2.5% of the total population in the US, a number which steadily increases with age [1]

  • Preparation of 3D cellularized constructs: Primary porcine aortic valvular interstitial cells (PAVICs) and endothelial cells (PAVECs) from passage 3–5 were used in this study

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Summary

Introduction

Heart disease is the most challenging and severe health problem worldwide, accounting for one in seven deaths in the US [1]. By developing a 3D valvular cell construct in a biochemically-suitable environment (composed of collagen, elastin, and proteoglycans), one will be able to determine the most important variables to be considered in the design and engineering of novel products for heart valve replacement and repair. If progenitor VICs and endothelial progenitors are employed, EndoMT can harness their differentiation abilities, potentially leading to more successful constructs than those developed with mesenchymal stem cells from other adult tissues [15,16].

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