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Influence of Laminin Coating on the Autologous In Vivo Recellularization of Decellularized Vascular Protheses

Authors :
Mahfuza Toshmatova
Artur Lichtenberg
Payam Akhyari
Alexander Assmann
Yukiharu Sugimura
V. Schmidt
Sentaro Nakanishi
Source :
Materials, Vol 12, Iss 20, p 3351 (2019), Materials, Volume 12, Issue 20
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2019.

Abstract

Decellularization of non-autologous biological implants reduces the immune response against foreign tissue. Striving for in vivo repopulation of aortic prostheses with autologous cells, thereby improving the graft biocompatibility, we examined surface coating with laminin in a standardized rat implantation model. Detergent-decellularized aortic grafts from donor rats (n = 37) were coated with laminin and systemically implanted into Wistar rats. Uncoated implants served as controls. Implant re-colonization and remodeling were examined by scanning electron microscopy (n = 10), histology and immunohistology (n = 18). Laminin coating persisted over eight weeks. Two weeks after implantation, no relevant neoendothelium formation was observed, whereas it was covering the whole grafts after eight weeks, with a significant acceleration in the laminin group (p = 0.0048). Remarkably, the intima-to-media ratio, indicating adverse hyperplasia, was significantly diminished in the laminin group (p = 0.0149). No intergroup difference was detected in terms of medial recellularization (p = 0.2577). Alpha-smooth muscle actin-positive cells originating from the adventitial surface invaded the media in both groups to a similar extent. The amount of calcifying hydroxyapatite deposition in the intima and the media did not differ between the groups. Inflammatory cell markers (CD3 and CD68) proved negative in coated as well as uncoated decellularized implants. The coating of decellularized aortic implants with bioactive laminin caused an acceleration of the autologous recellularization and a reduction of the intima hyperplasia. Thereby, laminin coating seems to be a promising strategy to enhance the biocompatibility of tissue-engineered vascular implants.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19961944
Volume :
12
Issue :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Materials
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....85c7993bcbca523d6f490f2704a5a994