Abstract

Oesophageal tissue engineering is a therapeutic alternative when oesophageal replacement is required. Decellularised scaffolds are ideal as they are derived from tissue-specific extracellular matrix and are non-immunogenic. However, appropriate preservation may significantly affect scaffold behaviour. Here we aim to prove that an effective method for short- and long-term preservation can be applied to tissue engineered products allowing their translation to clinical application. Rabbit oesophagi were decellularised using the detergent-enzymatic treatment (DET), a combination of deionised water, sodium deoxycholate and DNase-I. Samples were stored in phosphate-buffered saline solution at 4°C (4°C) or slow cooled in medium with 10% Me2SO at -1°C/min followed by storage in liquid nitrogen (SCM). Structural and functional analyses were performed prior to and after 2 and 4 weeks and 3 and 6 months of storage under each condition. Efficient decellularisation was achieved after 2 cycles of DET as determined with histology and DNA quantification, with preservation of the ECM. Only the SCM method, commonly used for cell storage, maintained the architecture and biomechanical properties of the scaffold up to 6 months. On the contrary, 4°C method was effective for short-term storage but led to a progressive distortion and degradation of the tissue architecture at the following time points. Efficient storage allows a timely use of decellularised oesophagi, essential for clinical translation. Here we describe that slow cooling with cryoprotectant solution in liquid nitrogen vapour leads to reliable long-term storage of decellularised oesophageal scaffolds for tissue engineering purposes.

Highlights

  • Tissue engineering can offer effective alternatives to conventional treatments through the development of bio-constructs that can restore or replace damaged tissue and organs

  • Each detergentenzymatic treatment (DET) cycle was composed of deionised water at 4 ̊C for 24 hrs, 4% sodium deoxycholate (SDC; Sigma, UK) at room temperature (RT) for 4 hrs, and 2000 Kunitz DNase-I (Sigma, UK) in 1 M NaCl at RT for 3 hrs

  • Synchrotron images confirmed the preservation of the different strata. Based on these findings we proved that 2 DET cycles were efficient in removing the cellular components while preserving extracellular matrix (ECM) integrity

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Summary

Introduction

Tissue engineering can offer effective alternatives to conventional treatments through the development of bio-constructs that can restore or replace damaged tissue and organs. The authors are grateful to the personnel of beamline ID17 at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility for their help in setting up and running the synchrotron experiment

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