Abstract

Tracheal defects lead to devastating problems, and practical clinical substitutes that have complex functional structures and can avoid adverse influences from exogenous bioscaffolds are lacking. Herein, a modular strategy for scaffold-free tracheal engineering is developed. A cartilage sheet (Cart-S) prepared by high-density culture is laminated and reshaped to construct a cartilage tube as the main load-bearing structure in which the chondrocytes exhibit a stable phenotype and secreted considerable cartilage-specific matrix, presenting a native-like grid arrangement. To further build a tracheal epithelial barrier, a temperature-sensitive technique is used to construct the monolayer epithelium sheet (Epi-S), in which the airway epithelial cells present integrated tight junctions, good transepithelial electrical resistance, and favorable ciliary differentiation capability. Epi-S can be integrally transferred to inner wall of cartilage tube, forming a scaffold-free complex tracheal substitute (SC-trachea). Interestingly, when Epi-S is attached to the cartilage surface, epithelium-specific gene expression is significantly enhanced. SC-trachea establishes abundant blood supply via heterotopic vascularization and then is pedicle transplanted for tracheal reconstruction, achieving 83.3% survival outcomes in rabbit models. Notably, the scaffold-free engineered trachea simultaneously satisfies sufficient mechanical properties and barrier function due to its matrix-rich cartilage structure and well-differentiated ciliated epithelium, demonstrating great clinical potential for long-segmental tracheal reconstruction.

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