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Fabrication of Adipose-Derived Stem Cell-Based Self-Assembled Scaffold under Hypoxia and Mechanical Stimulation for Urethral Tissue Engineering

Authors :
Farrah Hani Imran
Reynu Rajan
Zulkifli Md Zainuddin
Mohamad Aznan Shuhaili
Zahra Rashidbenam
Guan Hee Tan
Eng Hong Goh
Rizal Abdul Rani
Fatimah Mohd Nor
Min Hwei Ng
Mohd Hafidzul Jasman
Xeng Inn Fam
Christopher Chee Kong Ho
Nik Ritza Kosai
Source :
International Journal of Molecular Sciences, Vol 22, Iss 3350, p 3350 (2021), International Journal of Molecular Sciences, Volume 22, Issue 7
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2021.

Abstract

Long urethral strictures are often treated with autologous genital skin and buccal mucosa grafts<br />however, risk of hair ingrowth and donor site morbidity, restrict their application. To overcome this, we introduced a tissue-engineered human urethra comprising adipose-derived stem cell (ASC)-based self-assembled scaffold, human urothelial cells (UCs) and smooth muscle cells (SMCs). ASCs were cultured with ascorbic acid to stimulate extracellular matrix (ECM) production. The scaffold (ECM) was stained with collagen type-I antibody and the thickness was measured under a confocal microscope. Results showed that the thickest scaffold (28.06 ± 0.59 μm) was achieved with 3 × 104 cells/cm2 seeding density, 100 μg/mL ascorbic acid concentration under hypoxic and dynamic culture condition. The biocompatibility assessment showed that UCs and SMCs seeded on the scaffold could proliferate and maintain the expression of their markers (CK7, CK20, UPIa, and UPII) and (α-SMA, MHC and Smootheline), respectively, after 14 days of in vitro culture. ECM gene expression analysis showed that the ASC and dermal fibroblast-based scaffolds (control) were comparable. The ASC-based scaffold can be handled and removed from the plate. This suggests that multiple layers of scaffold can be stacked to form the urothelium (seeded with UCs), submucosal layer (ASCs only), and smooth muscle layer (seeded with SMCs) and has the potential to be developed into a fully functional human urethra for urethral reconstructive surgeries.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16616596 and 14220067
Volume :
22
Issue :
3350
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Molecular Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1012c50d5239271b134341536553b1d0