3D-Printed proangiogenic patches of photo-crosslinked gelatin and polyurethane hydrogels laden with vascular cells for treating vascular ischemic diseases

Engineering vascularized tissues remains a promising approach for treating ischemic cardiovascular diseases. The availability of 3D-bioprinted vascular grafts that induce therapeutic angiogenesis can help avoid necrosis and excision of ischemic tissues. Here, using a combination of living cells and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biomaterials 2024-09, Vol.309, p.122600, Article 122600
Hauptverfasser: Shih, Yu-Tsung, Cheng, Kun-Chih, Ko, Yi-Ju, Lin, Chia-Yu, Wang, Mei-Cun, Lee, Chih-I, Lee, Pei-Ling, Qi, Rong, Chiu, Jeng-Jiann, Hsu, Shan-hui
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Engineering vascularized tissues remains a promising approach for treating ischemic cardiovascular diseases. The availability of 3D-bioprinted vascular grafts that induce therapeutic angiogenesis can help avoid necrosis and excision of ischemic tissues. Here, using a combination of living cells and biodegradable hydrogels, we fabricated 3D-printed biocompatible proangiogenic patches from endothelial cell-laden photo-crosslinked gelatin (EC-PCG) bioink and smooth muscle cell-encapsulated polyurethane (SMC-PU) bioink. Implantation of 3D-bioprinted proangiogenic patches in a mouse model showed that EC-PCG served as an angiogenic capillary bed, whereas patterned SMC-PU increased the density of microvessels. Moreover, the assembled patterns between EC-PCG and SMC-PU induced the geometrically guided generation of microvessels with blood perfusion. In a rodent model of hindlimb ischemia, the vascular patches rescued blood flow to distal tissues, prevented toe/foot necrosis, promoted muscle remodeling, and increased the capillary density, thereby improving the heat-escape behavior of ischemic animals. Thus, our 3D-printed vascular cell-laden bioinks constitute efficient and scalable biomaterials that facilitate the engineering of vascular patches capable of directing therapeutic angiogenesis for treating ischemic vascular diseases.
ISSN:0142-9612
1878-5905
1878-5905
DOI:10.1016/j.biomaterials.2024.122600