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Engineered Blood Vessels Function Like Native Tissue
September 01, 2007
- Blood vessels that have been tissue-engineered from
bone marrow adult stem cells may in the future serve as a patient's own
source of new blood vessels following a coronary bypass or other
procedures that require vessel replacement, according to new research
from the University at Buffalo Department of Chemical and Biological
Engineering.
"Our results show that bone
marrow is an excellent source of adult stem cells containing smooth
muscle and endothelial cells, and that these stem cells can be used in
regenerative medicine for cardiovascular applications," said Stelios T.
Andreadis, Ph.D., associate professor in the UB Department of Chemical
and Biological Engineering in the School of Engineering and Applied
Sciences. Andreadis co-authored the paper, published recently
in Cardiovascular Research, with Jin Yu Liu, Ph.D., lead author and a
post doctoral researcher in Andreadis' lab. The research
demonstrates the potential for eventually growing tissue-engineered
vessels out of stem cells harvested from the patients who need them,
providing a desirable alternative to the venous grafts now routinely
done in patients undergoing coronary bypass operations.
Disadvantages with venous grafts include limited availability of
vessels, pain and discomfort at the donor site and a high 10-year
failure rate. The UB researchers developed a novel method for
isolating functional smooth muscle cells from bone marrow by using a
fluorescent marker protein and a tissue-specific promoter for
alpha-actin, a protein found in muscles that is responsible for their
ability to contract and relax. Although not yet strong enough
for coronary applications, the UB group's tissue-engineered vessels
(TEVs) performed similarly to native tissue in critical ways, including
their morphology, their expression of several smooth muscle cell
proteins, the ability to proliferate and the ability to contract in
response to vasoconstrictors, one of the most important properties of
blood vessels. The TEVs also produced both collagen and elastin,
which give connective tissue their strength and elasticity and are
critical to the functioning of artificial blood vessels. "These are the first tissue-engineered vessels to demonstrate the ability to make elastin in vivo," said Andreadis.
In addition, the smooth muscle cells isolated from the bone marrow are
mesenchymal cells, that is, stem cells that can differentiate into
several cell types. Several studies have shown that
mesenchymal stem cells may be immunoprivileged, which means they will
not trigger an immune reaction when transplanted into another
individual, Andreadis said. "If true, this means that you may be
able to develop a universal cell source for smooth muscle cells, so
that you could potentially make these vessels into an 'off-the-shelf'
product, available to any patient," Andreadis said. The TEVs were implanted into sheep and functioned normally for five weeks.
Andreadis' group now is working on ways to make the TEVs stronger. It
also is studying the differences between stem cells taken from older
versus younger individuals, work that is being funded by the John R.
Oishei Foundation. Co-authors on the paper with Andreadis and
J.Y. Liu include Daniel D. Swartz, Ph.D., research assistant professor
at Women and Children's Hospital of Buffalo; Sylvia F. Gugino, UB
senior research support specialist; James A. Russell, Ph.D., in the UB
Department of Physiology and Biophysics; and Hao Fan Peng, graduate
student in the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering.
Funding for the current work came from UB's Integrative Research and
Creative Activities Fund in the UB Office of the Vice President for
Research.
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