Design of a Mechanobioreactor to Apply Anisotropic, Biaxial Strain to Large Thin Biomaterials for Tissue Engineered Heart Valve Applications
Repair and replacement solutions for congenitally diseased heart valves capable of post-surgery growth and adaptation have remained elusive. Tissue engineered heart valves (TEHVs) offer a potential biological solution that addresses the drawbacks of existing valve replacements. Typically, TEHVs are...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Annals of biomedical engineering 2022-09, Vol.50 (9), p.1073-1089 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Repair and replacement solutions for congenitally diseased heart valves capable of post-surgery growth and adaptation have remained elusive. Tissue engineered heart valves (TEHVs) offer a potential biological solution that addresses the drawbacks of existing valve replacements. Typically, TEHVs are made from thin, fibrous biomaterials that either become cell populated
in vitro
or
in situ.
Often, TEHV designs poorly mimic the anisotropic mechanical properties of healthy native valves leading to inadequate biomechanical function. Mechanical conditioning of engineered tissues with anisotropic strain application can induce extracellular matrix remodelling to alter the anisotropic mechanical properties of a construct, but implementation has been limited to small-scale set-ups. To address this limitation for TEHV applications, we designed and built a mechanobioreactor capable of modulating biaxial strain anisotropy applied to large, thin, biomaterial sheets
in vitro.
The bioreactor can independently control two orthogonal stretch axes to modulate applied strain anisotropy on biomaterial sheets from 13 × 13 mm
2
to 70 × 40 mm
2
. A design of experiments was performed using experimentally validated finite element (FE) models and demonstrated that biaxial strain was applied uniformly over a larger percentage of the cell seeded area for larger sheets (13 × 13 mm
2
: 58% of sheet area vs. 52 × 31 mm
2
: 86% of sheet area). Furthermore, bioreactor prototypes demonstrated that over 70% of the cell seeding area remained uniformly strained under different prescribed protocols: equibiaxial amplitudes between 5 to 40%, cyclic frequencies between 0.1 to 2.5 Hz and anisotropic strain ratios between 0:1 (constrained uniaxial) to 2:1. Lastly, proof-of-concept experiments were conducted where we applied equibiaxial (
ε
x
=
ε
y
= 8.75%) and anisotropic (
ε
x
= 12.5%,
ε
y
= 5%) strain protocols to cell-seeded, electrospun scaffolds. Cell nuclei and F-actin aligned to the vector-sum strain direction of each prescribed protocol (nuclei alignment: equibiaxial: 43.2° ± 1.8°, anisotropic: 17.5° ± 1.7°;
p
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ISSN: | 0090-6964 1573-9686 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10439-022-02984-3 |