Abstract

The development of a functional in vitro model for microcirculation is an unresolved challenge, with major impact for the creation and regeneration of organs in the tissue engineering. The absence of prevascularized engineered tissues limits enormously their efficacy and integration. Therefore, in this study, the in vitro formation of tubular-like structures with human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) is investigated thanks to three-dimensional polycarbonate (PC) microchannel (μCh) scaffolds, surface biofunctionalized with hyaluronic acid/chitosan (HA/CHI) layer-by-layer (LbL) films grafted with adhesive (RGD) and angiogenic (SVV and QK) peptides, alone and in combination. The importance of this work lies in the formation of capillaries in the order of tens of μm, developing spontaneous microvessels, without the complexity of microfluidic approaches, and in a short time-scale. Ellipsometry, confocal laser scanning microscopy, and fluorospectrometry are used to characterize the biofunctionalized microchannels. PC-μCh scaffolds functionalized with (HA/CHI)12.5 film (PC-LbL) and further grafted with RGD and QK peptides (PC-RGD+QK) or with RGD and SVV peptides (PC-RGD+SVV) are then tested for in vitro blood vessel formation. These assays evidence a rapid formation of tubular-like structures after 2 h of incubation. Moreover, a coculture system involving HUVECs and human pericytes derived from placenta (hPCs-PL) stabilizes the tubes for a longer time.

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