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Integration of hollow fiber membranes improves nutrient supply in three-dimensional tissue constructs

Authors :
C.A. van Blitterswijk
Matthias Wessling
Dimitrios Stamatialis
Gustavo A. Higuera
Lorenzo Moroni
J. Vicente
N.M.S. Bettahalli
Biomaterials Science and Technology
Membrane Science & Technology
Faculty of Science and Technology
Source :
Acta biomaterialia, 7(9), 3312-3324. Elsevier
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Sufficient nutrient and oxygen transport is a potent modulator of cell proliferation in in vitro tissue-engineered constructs. The lack of oxygen and culture medium can create a potentially lethal environment and limit cellular metabolic activity and growth. Diffusion through scaffold and multi-cellular tissue typically limits transport in vitro, leading to potential hypoxic regions and reduction in the viable tissue thickness. For the in vitro generation of clinically relevant tissue-engineered grafts, current nutrient diffusion limitations should be addressed. Major approaches to overcoming these include culture with bioreactors, scaffolds with artificial microvasculature, oxygen carriers and pre-vascularization of the engineered tissues. This study focuses on the development and utilization of a new perfusion culture system to provide adequate nutrient delivery to cells within large three-dimensional (3D) scaffolds. Perfusion of oxygenated culture medium through porous hollow fiber (HF) integrated within 3D free form fabricated (FFF) scaffolds is proposed. Mouse pre-myoblast (C2C12) cells cultured on scaffolds of poly(ethylene-oxide-terephthalate)–poly(butylene-terephthalate) block copolymer (300PEOT55PBT45) integrated with porous HF membranes of modified poly(ether-sulfone) (mPES, Gambro GmbH) is used as a model system. Various parameters such as fiber transport properties, fiber spacing within a scaffold and medium flow conditions are optimized. The results show that four HF membranes integrated with the scaffold significantly improve the cell density and cell distribution. This study provides a basis for the development of a new HF perfusion culture methodology to overcome the limitations of nutrient diffusion in the culture of large 3D tissue constructs.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17427061
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Acta biomaterialia, 7(9), 3312-3324. Elsevier
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d3f77af62e4753118b8871a3f1993472