Developing improved tissue-engineered buccal mucosa grafts for urethral reconstruction
DOI :
https://doi.org/10.5489/cuaj.4826Résumé
Introduction: We aimed to compare alternative synthetic scaffolds suitable for future implantation and to examine the use of an inhibitor of lysyl oxidase (beta-amino-propionitrile [β-APN]) to reduce contraction in these implants.
Methods: Three synthetic scaffolds were compared to natural dermis as substrates for the production of tissue-engineered skin. For natural dermis, Euroskin was used to provide a cell-free cadaveric dermis. Synthetic scaffolds consisted of microfibrous poly-L-lactic acid (PLA), nanofibrous poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyvalerate) (PHBV), and a micro-/nanofibrous trilayer of PLA-PHBV-PLA. The latter were all electrospun and then all four scaffolds (three synthetic, one natural) were placed in six well plates. A culture well was formed on the scaffold using a 1 cm diameter stainless steel ring and 1.5x105 oral fibroblasts were seeded one side; after two days of culture, the ring was placed on the other side of the scaffolds and 3x105 oral keratinocytes were seeded on to the scaffolds and cultured with keratinocytes uppermost. After a further two days of culture, scaffolds were cut to 1 cm2 and raised to an air-liquid interface on stainless steel grids; some were treated with 200 μg/ mL β-APN throughout the culture period (28 days). Contraction in vitro was assessed by serial digital photography of cell-seeded scaffolds and cell-free scaffolds three times a week for 28 days. All cell-seeded scaffolds were assessed for cell metabolic activity, mechanical properties, histology, and morphology by scanning electron microscopy (SEM).
Results: The mean fibre diameters and pore sizes of PLA and PHBV scaffolds were 2.4±0.77, 0.85±0.21 μm (p<0.001), and 10.8±2.3, 4.3±1.1 μm (p<0.001), respectively. Oral fibroblasts and keratinocytes were tightly adhered and grew well on both surfaces of trilayer. The ultimate tensile strength (UTS) and Young’s modulus (YM) of PLA samples were significantly lower than Euroskin (p<0.001 and p<0.05, respectively); only the UTS of the trilayer samples was slightly significantly lower (p<0.05). Metabolic activity was significantly increased for cells on all scaffolds, without significant differences between them from Day 0 to Day 28. There were no adverse effects of β-APN on cell viability. With respect to contraction, cells on trilayer and PHBV monolayers did not undergo any significant contraction; however, cells on PLA monolayer and Euroskin contracted 25.3% and 56.4%, respectively, over 28 days. The addition of 200 μg/ml β-APN significantly reduced contraction of Euroskin compared with the control (p<0.01); however, β-APN did not affect PLA contraction during this culture period (p>0.05).
Conclusions: This study shows that a trilayer micro-nano-3D porous synthetic scaffold is suitable for oral keratinocyte and fibroblast growth with good cell viability and minimal contraction. This material also has good mechanical properties and histological analyses showed its ability to mimic normal human oral mucosal morphology. Furthermore, synthetic trilayer scaffolds have advantages over biological scaffolds — there is no risk of disease transmission or immunological rejection and they appear resistant to contraction. We suggest they present a good alternative to allodermis for future use in urethral reconstruction.
Téléchargements
Téléchargements
Publié-e
Comment citer
Numéro
Rubrique
Licence
Les auteurs accordent les droits d’auteurs liés à l’article et son contenu à l’Association des urologues du Canada. Cette entente signifie que vous ne pouvez pas faire ce qui suit, sans d’abord obtenir l’autorisation écrite de l’AUC :
- Afficher l’article sur tout site Web.
- Traduire ou autoriser une tierce partie à traduire l’article.
- Copier ou reproduire l’article par quelque moyen que ce soit et sous tout format que ce soit, ou autoriser d’autres à le faire, au-delà de ce qui est permis par la loi canadienne du droit d’auteur.
- Copier ou reproduire des sections de l’article, y compris les tableaux et figures, par quelque moyen que ce soit, ou autoriser d’autres à le faire, au-delà de ce qui est permis par la loi canadienne du droit d’auteur.
L’AUC encourage l’usage des articles à des fins éducatives sans but commercial et ne refusera pas sans motif raisonnable toute demande d’autorisation à cet effet.
Vous conservez le droit moral lié à l’article et son contenu. Cela signifie que l’AUC ne peut utiliser ses droits d’auteurs d’une manière telle que cela pourrait avoir des répercussions négatives sur votre réputation ou sur votre droit à être associé à l’article.
L’AUC exige également que vous garantissiez ce qui suit :
- Vous êtes l’auteur ou les auteurs et seul(s) propriétaire(s) du contenu, le contenu de l’article est original et n’a jamais été publié et vous n’en avez pas déjà cédé les droits d’auteurs ni accordé de licence concernant son contenu à toute autre tierce partie;
- Toutes les personnes qui ont contribué de manière considérable à la rédaction de l’article sont mentionnées;
- L’article ne viole aucun droit de propriété de toute tierce partie, et vous avez obtenu les autorisations requises pour inclure les travaux d’autres personnes dans cet article; et
- L’article ne diffame aucune tierce partie ni ne viole les droits à la vie privée de toute tierce partie.
