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W tym Artykule

  • Podsumowanie
  • Streszczenie
  • Wprowadzenie
  • Protokół
  • Wyniki
  • Dyskusje
  • Ujawnienia
  • Podziękowania
  • Materiały
  • Odniesienia
  • Przedruki i uprawnienia

Podsumowanie

Vascularization is key to approaches in successful tissue engineering. Therefore, reliable technologies are required to evaluate the development of vascular networks in tissue-constructs. Here we present a simple and cost-effective method to visualize and quantify vascularization in vivo.

Streszczenie

Insufficient vascularization is considered to be one of the main factors limiting the clinical success of tissue-engineered constructs. In order to evaluate new strategies that aim at improving vascularization, reliable methods are required to make the in-growth of new blood vessels into bio-artificial scaffolds visible and quantify the results. Over the past couple of years, our group has introduced a full skin defect model that enables the direct visualization of blood vessels by transillumination and provides the possibility of quantification through digital segmentation. In this model, one surgically creates full skin defects in the back of mice and replaces them with the material tested. Molecules or cells of interest can also be incorporated in such materials to study their potential effect. After an observation time of one’s own choice, materials are explanted for evaluation. Bilateral wounds provide the possibility of making internal comparisons that minimize artifacts among individuals as well as of decreasing the number of animals needed for the study. In comparison to other approaches, our method offers a simple, reliable and cost effective analysis. We have implemented this model as a routine tool to perform high-resolution screening when testing vascularization of different biomaterials and bio-activation approaches.

Wprowadzenie

In the recent decades, tissue engineering has opened up a new therapeutic option to replace tissue defects with the body’s own cells1. In order to support the physiological process of tissue regeneration, scaffolds are designed as a biodegradable structure, that provides a scenario where cells from the wound bed can grow and restore the defect2,3.

Insufficient vascularization is considered to be the main obstacle, which holds back the clinical breakthrough of bioartificial scaffolds4. With the ingrowth of cells, the demand for nutrients and oxygen increases and vascularization of the material becomes essential. Insufficient or delayed vascularization can therefore lead to central necrosis of tissue-engineered products5. In addition, blood vessels provide immune competent cells and remove the metabolic residues in the regenerating area. High infection rates and low regeneration are only some of the consequences of insufficient blood perfusion observed in tissue engineering, which are aimed to be averted by increasing the vascularization of the scaffolds6,7.

Several strategies that aim at improving vascularization focus on the key role of the biomaterial itself and the microstructure of the scaffold. There are intensive research efforts to develop new approaches in shifting the healing process from repair to regeneration, thereby (re)generating a tissue with the closest physiological properties to the one to be restored8,9. Biomaterials that were studied and evaluated with regards to their regenerative potential included collagen, fibrin, chitosan and alginate10,11. These biomaterials can be used and combined as a backbone for building new scaffolds using different strategies such as tissue decellularization, self-assembly, rapid prototyping and electrospinning12. In order to enhance the body’s own regenerative capacity, scaffolds can be bioactivated. The incorporation of recombinant angiogenic growth factors13 or gene vectors encoding for such factors14 has shown to improve vascularization of the scaffold. The use of stem cells has been widely shown to be a promising strategy to improve vascularization, where mesenchymal stromal cells and endothelial progenitor cells have gained the most attention15,16. Other approaches attempt to build constructs that contain prefabricated vessel networks prior to transplantation17. Despite intensive efforts in scaffold design and their bio-activation, no strategy has improved vascularization at a clinically significant level and, with the exception of dermal replacements in massive burn injuries, the translation of bioengineered materials into the clinical routine is only taking place hesitantly18.

One of the reasons why vascularization of artificial tissue constructs is still an unsolved problem, is the difficulty to evaluate the success of new technologies in in vivo approaches. Although in vitro experiments may provide important insights of the vascularization potential of scaffolds, appropriate animal models are required to study key parameters such as the biocompatibility of the material, the safety and efficacy of the treatment and, of particular importance, the vascularization of the tissue construct. Therefore, reliable tools to visualize and quantify blood vessel networks in vivo are essential.

In this study we present a simple and reliable method that allows the visualization and quantification of the vascular network inside explanted scaffolds. This method is based on tissue transillumination and digital segmentation. Since this method is non-invasive, it allows further molecular and histological analyses of the target material.

Protokół

1. Preparation of Scaffolds

  1. Generate samples of the scaffolds by using 12 mm biopsy punches.
  2. To introduce bioactive molecules or cells into the scaffold, drain the scaffolds by gently squeezing them with a sterile gauze. Then rehydrate the scaffolds by adding 160 µl of a solution containing the bioactive molecules or cells of interest. Double-check the success of bioactivation with cells through metabolic assays such as MTT Assays.
  3. If necessary, fix the compounds or cells to be tested inside the scaffold by delivering them, for instance in a fibrin-thrombin solution or a hydrogel, again through rehydration as described in step 1.2.
    NOTE: This step can be of helpful when compounds or cells do not mechanically attach to the material. One can also control the release dynamics of the compounds..
  4. Prepare the titanized meshes, which will be placed under each scaffold in every experiment and control group, by cutting out round shaped pieces, approximately 14 mm in diameter.
    NOTE: The titanized mesh works as a physical border required to delimit the regenerated tissue from the wound bed.

2. Animals

  1. Prior to implementation of the presented model, consult the corresponding animal protection laws and obtain permission from the local authorities. In this work, all experiments were performed with mice, according to the current German animal welfare act and approved by the District Government of Upper Bavaria (Regierung von Oberbayern).
  2. Carefully choose the animal and strain. Although the model was established for mice, it can be translated to other common animals, such as rats, rabbits or pigs.
  3. In case you are working with furred animals, shave the back of the animals before implantation of the scaffolds.
    NOTE: This work uses mice of 6 to 8 weeks of age with a body weight between 20 g and 25 g, however different ages and body weights can also be used.

3. Anesthesia

  1. Conduct the operation under sterile conditions. In order to maintain the animal’s normal body temperature, use a warming mat.
  2. Prior to inhalative anesthesia the animals receive Buprenorphin at a dose of 0.05-0.1 mg/kg bodyweight, subcutaneously every 8 hr.
  3. Place the animal under inhalative anesthesia (Isoflurane) or apply equivalent standard procedures. Confirm anesthesia either by gently squeezing the animal’s toes or through a skin pinch.
  4. To prevent exsiccosis, inject 0.5 ml physiologic saline solution subcutaneously at the beginning of the operation.

4. Excision of the Skin

  1. Place the animal in a prone position and mark the midline of the mouse’s back with a fine tip permanent pen (Figure 1A).
  2. Define the excision area. Place the defects in the area shown in Figure 1C. Note that if the defects are placed too caudally, animals are more prone to remove the dressings and the scaffolds.
  3. Create round bilateral defects using a 10 mm biopsy punch (Figure 1B). The punch should be carefully forced against the skin and must not be used to cut completely through the skin, but to delineate the excision area (Figures 1C & 1E).
  4. Gently lift off the marked skin with forceps and incise along the marked circle using fine surgical scissors (Figure 1F). In case of bleeding, carefully compress with sterile gauze. A step-by-step description of the excision is shown in Figure 1.
    NOTE: The defect is created with a smaller punch than the one for generating the scaffolds, to compensate the enlargement of the defect due to the skin elasticity.

5. Scaffold Implantation

  1. In order to make space for the titanized mesh, extend the separation of skin and underlying tissue at the wound borders for 2-4 mm (Figure 2A).
  2. Place the titanized mesh into the defect directly on the wound bed and under the wound edges (Figures 2A & B).
  3. Place scaffolds directly over the mesh.
  4. Suture the scaffolds to the adjacent wound edges with 4 to 6 single knots, leaving the edges slightly over the scaffold (Figure 2C).
    NOTE: Avoid the use of biodegradable sutures.
  5. Suture a transparent wound dressing above the defects to protect the scaffold while allowing monitoring of the wound area (Figure 2D).

6. Postoperative Care

  1. Keep one mouse per cage to avert mutual manipulation of the dressing and scaffolds.
  2. Evaluate the general state of the animal on a daily basis by observing motor activity, body weight, signs of pain, tolerance to the dressing and auto-mutilation. Also monitor the wound area for bleeding, local and systemic signs of infection and the position of the dressing.
  3. In order to minimize the pain of the animal, inject Buprenorphin daily at a dose of 0.05-0.1 mg/kg bodyweight or equivalent analgesic medication.
  4. If the mouse removes or damages the wound dressing, replace or reattach it under anesthesia.

7. Euthanasia and Explantation of the Scaffold

  1. At desired time points, sacrifice the animals by overdoses of Pentobarbital (150 mg/kg).
  2. Mark the site of skin excision with a permanent marker, which should include the scaffolds and as much of the mouse back skin as possible (Figure 3A).
  3. Incise the skin along the marked lines with a pair of scissors or a scalpel. Detach the entire skin, including the scaffolds and the titanized mesh, from the underlying tissue through blunt preparation (Figure 3B).
  4. Place the explanted tissue stretched out on a Petri dish (Figure 3C and D)

8. Visualization and Quantification of the Vascular Network

  1. Transillumination:
    1. Set up a transillumination device, by mounting a Petri dish above a strong source of white light (100 Watt standard light bulb).
    2. Fix a digital camera above the transilluminator to obtain digital pictures.
    3. Place the samples upside down on the Petri dish over the transillumination device.
    4. Take pictures of the complete scaffolds in macro mode as well as of equally sized areas of normal skin. Store the images in a TIFF format for further digital analysis.
    5. Save the tissue for further biochemical or histological analysis.
  2. Digital segmentation and quantification:
    1. Download and install the VesSeg-Tool software, which can be obtained free of charge at: http://www.isip.uni-luebeck.de/index.php?id=150&L=2%255.
    2. Open the picture with the VesSeg-Tool software.
    3. Select the area of the image covered by the scaffold for digital analysis (Image→Select).
    4. To increase the contrast of vessels use the option “Hysteresis thresholding” (Image→Vessel enhancement filter→Hysteresis thresholding→Top-Hat transformation→Calculate vessel enhancement).
    5. Proceed with the segmentation of the vessel map (Image→Vessel enhancement filter→Hysteresis thresholding→Threshold borders). Select the first threshold (“Vessel coverage”), so every pixel, which is even remotely vessel-like, will be labeled as vessel. Select the second threshold (“Background coverage”), so only those pixels that are particularly vessel-like will be labeled as vessels.
    6. Check the automatic segmentation proposal manually to add non-captured vessels and to eliminate common false-positive structures, which usually are long and thin, vessel-like structures such as hairs or sutures.
    7. Calculate the length of the vessels and the overall area covered by vessels (Image→Image statistics→Binary image statistics).
      NOTE: For the calculation of the vessel-lengths, vessels in the resulting vessel map are thinned to lines with a width of one pixel20.
  3. Analyze the native skin area under the same parameters as the scaffolds, assigning a value of 100% to the native tissue and relate the scaffold to that value. For instance, if the percentage of white pixels is 60% in the normal tissue and 30% in the scaffold, it would represent a 50% vascularization of the scaffold. Note: The white vessels coverage is assigned to the area of a square around the scaffold. Adjust the number of white pixels coverage considering that the area of the circle is significantly smaller (π x R2) than the square (4 x R2).

Wyniki

A reliable bilateral full skin defect can be created in the mouse (Figure 1) where the skin can be replaced by a biomaterial under study (Figure 2). Here, no major complications are observed during or after the operative procedure, neither macroscopic signs of infection or foreign body reaction. In rare cases, a scaffold gets lost when a mouse removes it. Wound contraction was never observed (Figure 3). Tissue transillumination allowed clear visualization ...

Dyskusje

There is a need to establish successful approaches in improving blood perfusion in tissue engineered constructs, which demands the development of new reliable methods to study the vascularization processes within the biomaterials. Common methods for making scaffold vascularization ex vivo visible include the use of microscopy, which provides a high-resolution tool. In most cases, though, this method is limited to the analysis of small tissue areas and tends to be expensive and time consuming. Moreover, it often ...

Ujawnienia

Conflict of interest statement:

All authors: None

Financial Disclosures:

None of the authors has a financial interest in any of the products, devices, or drugs mentioned in this manuscript.

Podziękowania

Integra dermal regeneration template was kindly provided by Integra LifeSciences Corporation. Sources of funds supporting the work: This work was partially financed by the CIRM-BMBF Early Translational II Award and the FONDAP Center for Genome regulation (Nr. 15090007) both to JTE.

Materiały

NameCompanyCatalog NumberComments
Ethilon P-3 13 mm 3/8 circle 5-0Ethicon, Norderstedt, Germany698GEthilon polyamid-6 precision point-reverse cutting suture
Biopsy punches (10 mm)Xiomedics, Acuderm inc., Fort Lauderdale, FL, USAP1050
Biopsy punches (12 mm)Xiomedics, Acuderm inc., Fort Lauderdale, FL, USAP1250
Digital camera Ricoh, Hannover, GermanyCx1
Gazin Mullkompresse Lohmann und Rauscher, Neuwied, Germany13622Sterile gauze (10 cm x 10 cm)
Double-layer collagen-based scaffold (8' x 10')Integra Life Science Corporation, Plainsboro, NJ, USA88101
Isoflurane, liquid-gas for inhalative anesthesia Baxter, Unterschleissheim, Germany100196040
Pentobarbital, 16 g / 100 mlFa. Merial, Hallbergmoos
Nuri Nu/Nu Nude mice, CrLNU-Foxn1nuCharles River, Sulzfeld, GermanyStrain code 088Athymic nude mice, 6 to 8 weeks of age and with a body weight between 20 to 25 g 
Buprenorphine (0.3 mg/ml)Essex Pharma GmbH, Munich, Germany
Titanized mesh (15 cm x 15 cm), extralightPFM Medical AG, Köln, Germany6000029
Tissucol Duo S Immuno 2 mlBaxter Germany GmbH, Unterschleißheim, GermanyB1332020110614Fibrin-thrombin solution 
Transparent adhesive drape (30.5 cm x 26 cm)KCI Medical Products, Wimborne Dorset, UKM6275009/10

Odniesienia

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  4. Priya, S. G., Jungvid, H., Kumar, A. Skin tissue engineering for tissue repair and regeneration. Tissue Engineering Part B: Reviews. 14, 105-118 (2008).
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Skin Defect ModelVascularizationBiomaterialsTissue EngineeringIn VivoBlood VesselsQuantificationTransilluminationDigital SegmentationFull Skin DefectsBilateral WoundsComparisonHigh resolution ScreeningBiomaterial Evaluation

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