Abstract

BackgroundTracheal tissue engineering is a promising option for the treatment of tracheal defects. In a previous study we proved the suitability of fibrin gel as a scaffold for tracheal tissue engineering. This study investigates whether the differentiation of respiratory epithelium can be increased by culturing epithelial cells in a three dimensional system containing fibroblasts embedded into fibrin gel.MethodsRespiratory epithelial cells were isolated from porcine trachea, seeded onto a fibrin gel and kept in air-liquid-interface culture for 33 days. Morphology as well as pan-cytokeratin, MUC5AC and claudin-1 expression of cells cultured on pure fibrin gel were compared to culture on gels containing fibroblasts.ResultsAfter two weeks, cells seeded on pure fibrin gel were multilayered, showed hyperproliferation and dedifferentiation. Co-cultured cells built up a pseudostratified epithelium. The differentiation and organization of epithelial structure improved with respect to time. After four weeks, morphology of the co-cultured respiratory epithelium resembled native tracheal epithelium. Immunohistochemistry showed that respiratory epithelium co-cultured with fibroblasts had an increasing similarity of pan-cytokeratin expression compared to native trachea. Cells cultured without fibroblasts differed in pan-cytokeratin expression from native trachea and did not show any improvement of differentiation. Immunohistochemical staining of MUC5AC and claudin-1 proved seeded cells being respiratory epithelial cells.ConclusionsThis study indicates that adding fibroblasts to fibrin gel positively influences the differentiation of respiratory epithelium.

Highlights

  • Tracheal tissue engineering is a promising option for the treatment of tracheal defects

  • We hypothesized that co-culture with fibroblasts might improve the differentiation of respiratory epithelium in a three-dimensional tissue model based on fibroblasts embedded into fibrin gel

  • periodic acid Schiff’s reaction (PAS)-reaction Cells seeded onto fibrin gel without fibroblasts built up a monolayer of cells by day 7

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Summary

Introduction

Tracheal tissue engineering is a promising option for the treatment of tracheal defects. In a previous study we proved the suitability of fibrin gel as a scaffold for tracheal tissue engineering. Long segment tracheomalacia and tracheostenosis are diseases with significant morbidity and a high mortality rate, since they affect respiration and mucociliary function of the trachea [1]. They mandate surgical treatment or stent implantation to ensure an adequate quality of life or even to permit survival of the patient. Since decellularized matrices need donor organs this approach might compete with organs required for transplantation. In their last proof of concept study, this group

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