Cardiac Organogenesis in Vitro: Reestablishment of Three-Dimensional Tissue Architecture by Dissociated Neonatal Rat Ventricular Cells
The mammalian heart does not regenerate in vivo . The heart is, therefore, an excellent candidate for tissue engineering approaches and for the use of biosynthetic devices in the replacement or augmentation of defective tissue. Unfortunately, little is known about the capacity of isolated heart cell...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Tissue engineering 1999-04, Vol.5 (2), p.13-118 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The mammalian heart does not regenerate
in vivo
. The heart is, therefore, an excellent candidate
for tissue engineering approaches and for the use of biosynthetic devices in the replacement
or augmentation of defective tissue. Unfortunately, little is known about the capacity
of isolated heart cells to re-establish tissue architectures
in vitro
. In this study, we
examined the possibility that cardiac cells possess a latent organizational potential that is
unrealized within the mechanically active tissue but that can be accessed in quiescent environments
in culture. In the series of experiments presented here, total cell populations were
isolated from neonatal rat ventricles and recombined in rotating bioreactors containing a
serum-free medium and surfaces for cell attachment. The extent to which tissue-like structure
and contractile function were established was assessed using a combination of morphological,
physiological, and biochemical techniques. We found that mixed populations of
ventricular cells formed extensive three-dimensional aggregates that were spontaneously and
rhythmically contractile and that large aggregates of structurally-organized cells contracted
in unison. The cells were differentially distributed in these aggregates and formed architectures
that were indistinguishable from those of intact tissue. These architectures arose in the
absence of three-dimensional cues from the matrix, and the formation of organotypic structures
was apparently driven by the cells themselves. Our observations suggest that cardiac
cells possess an innate capacity to re-establish complex, three-dimensional, cardiac organization
in vitro
. Understanding the basis of this capacity, and harnessing the organizational
potential of heart cells, will be critical in the development of tissue homologues for use in
basic research and in the engineering of biosynthetic implants for the treatment of cardiac
disease. |
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ISSN: | 1076-3279 1557-8690 |
DOI: | 10.1089/ten.1999.5.103 |