Physiologic pulsatile flow bioreactor conditioning of poly(ethylene glycol)-based tissue engineered vascular grafts

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Abstract

Mechanical conditioning represents a potential means to enhance the biochemical and biomechanical properties of tissue engineered vascular grafts (TEVGs). A pulsatile flow bioreactor was developed to allow shear and pulsatile stimulation of TEVGs. Physiological 120 mmHg/80 mmHg peak-to-trough pressure waveforms can be produced at both fetal and adult heart rates. Flow rates of 2 mL/sec, representative of flow through small diameter blood vessels, can be generated, resulting in a mean wall shear stress of ∼ 6 dynes/cm2 within the 3 mm ID constructs. When combined with non-thrombogenic poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG)-based hydrogels, which have tunable mechanical properties and tailorable biofunctionality, the bioreactor represents a flexible platform for exploring the impact of controlled biochemical and biomechanical stimuli on vascular graft cells. In the present study, the utility of this combined approach for improving TEVG outcome was investigated by encapsulating 10T-1/2 mouse smooth muscle progenitor cells within PEG-based hydrogels containing an adhesive ligand (RGDS) and a collagenase degradable sequence (LGPA). Constructs subjected to 7 weeks of biomechanical conditioning had significantly higher collagen levels and improved moduli relative to those grown under static conditions. © 2006 Biomedical Engineering Society.

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Hahn, M. S., McHale, M. K., Wang, E., Schmedlen, R. H., & West, J. L. (2007). Physiologic pulsatile flow bioreactor conditioning of poly(ethylene glycol)-based tissue engineered vascular grafts. Annals of Biomedical Engineering, 35(2), 190–200. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10439-006-9099-3

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