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J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 2000;119:732-740
© 2000 The American Association for Thoracic Surgery
SURGERY FOR CONGENITAL HEART DISEASE |
From the Department of Cardiovascular Surgery,a Department of Surgery,b Department of Cardiology,c Childrens Hospital, Boston, Mass; the Department of Pathology,d Brigham and Womens Hospital, Boston, Mass; Metabolix Inc,e Cambridge, Mass; and the Department of Chemical Engineering,f Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass.
Supported by grants from the Department of Cardiac Surgery, Childrens Hospital, Boston, Mass; Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Sto 359/1-1); and the National Institutes of Health (HL-97-005).
Address for reprints: John E. Mayer, Jr, MD, Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Childrens Hospital Harvard Medical School, 300 Longwood Ave, Boston, MA 02115 (E-mail: mayer{at}a1.tch-harvard.edu ).
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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| Materials and methods |
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Cell isolation and culture
Segments of the common carotid artery (2-3 cm) were harvested from 6-week-old Dover lambs (n = 8). Endothelial cells were obtained by using a collagenase instillation technique for 20 minutes at 37°C at 95% oxygen and 5% carbon dioxide (0.2% collagenase type A [Boehringer Mannheim] in 1% bovine serum albumin [Sigma]) and cultured in gelatin precoated (1% gelatin [Sigma]) tissue culture flasks (Corning Inc) by using Medium 199 (Gibco) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (Sigma), 1% L -glutamine, penicillin, streptomycin (Sigma), and 50 IU/mL heparin (Promega). The media was changed either every 3 days or during passaging.
The remaining de-endothelialized vessel segments were minced into 1-mm2 pieces and cultured in Dulbeccos modified Eagles medium high glucose (Gibco) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, 1% L -glutamine, penicillin, and streptomycin on P100 dishes (Corning). After migration of medial cells onto the dishes (7-10 days after the harvest), the cells were serially passaged on 1% collagen-precoated tissue-culture ware (Corning). Approximately 14 additional days were needed to obtain 12 confluent T75 tissue-culture flasks (Corning).
Biodegradable polymer and conduit design
The PHO was provided from Metabolix Inc, the PGA was purchased from Smith and Nephew Inc, and polydioxanone was purchased from Ethicon, Inc.
The conduit (20 mm in length and 18 mm in internal diameter) was composed of nonporous PHO film (240-µm thick) with layers of PGA felt (1-mm thickness) on the inside and outside of the PHO. The leaflets consisted of a monolayer of porous PHO (120-µm thickness). A salt-leaching technique
4 was used to create a porous material (pore sizes of 80-180 µm; Fig 2, A ) for the leaflets. The leaflets were sutured to the conduit wall by using 6-0 polydioxanone running sutures (Fig 2
, B ). After completion of the suturing, the conduits were immersed for 24 hours in 2% polyvinyl alcohol (Sigma) to decrease hydrophobic surface characteristics and increase the wettability of the PHO. After air drying, the constructs were sterilized with cold ethylene oxide.
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After 1 final incubation day in an Erlenmeyer flask (Corning) with culture media, the constructs were implanted.
Implantation
At 31 days (±3 days) after the initial cell harvest, the same 8 animals from which the initial vessel was harvested (average weight, 25 ± 5 kg) underwent replacement of the pulmonary valve and main pulmonary artery with an autologous tissue-engineered valved conduit. In one other animal an acellular polymer valved conduit was implanted. Anesthesia was induced with 2 mg/kg ketamine, 0.02 mg/kg atropine, and an intravenous bolus infusion of 2 mg/kg propofol. Anesthesia was maintained by use of inhalational isofluorane. The heart was exposed by a left anterolateral thoracotomy entering the chest through the 4th intercostal space. Systemic anticoagulation was induced with 400 IU of heparin per kilogram. By means of femoral arterial and right atrial venous cannulation, normothermic cardiopulmonary bypass was established. On bypass, 0.01 mg/kg fentanyl and 0.02 mg/kg pancuronium were administered to ensure anesthesia. With the heart beating, the pulmonary artery was transected, and a segment of the main pulmonary artery and all 3 native leaflets were removed. The valved conduit was implanted by using running 5-0 monofilament sutures (Prolene, Ethicon, Inc). Heparin was reversed with 300 IU of protamine per kilogram after weaning from bypass. The thoracic wall was closed in layers by using resorbable sutures, and an intercostal nerve block with 0.25% bupivacaine was administered. No further anticoagulation was given. All animals received 1000 mg of cefazolin (Apothecon) for the first postoperative week on a daily basis. For pain control, intramuscular buprenorphin injections were given for the first 3 days and thereafter as necessary. All animals received humane care in compliance with the "Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals" published by the National Institutes of Health (National Institutes of Health publication No. 85-23, revised 1985). After 7 days in Childrens Hospital research facilities, the animals were moved to an off-site indoor housing facility.
Evaluation of the tissue-engineered tricuspid conduits
After implantation, Doppler echocardiography with either an Accuson 128 or Hewlett-Packard Sonos 1500 Cardiac Imager equipped with a 7- to 7.5-MHz phased-arrayed transducer was used periodically to evaluate valve function. Two-dimensional echocardiographic cDoppler examination was performed of the right ventricular outflow tract, conduit, and distal main pulmonary artery immediately before chest closure. Subsequent evaluations after 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 12, and 24 weeks included imaging of the conduit and leaflets from a long- and short-axis view. Qualitative evaluation of pulmonary valve competence was made by using color flow Doppler mapping. The explanted conduit wall and the leaflets were evaluated macroscopically and histologically. For determination of cellular and extracellular components of the conduit wall, histochemical assays were performed. DNA content was measured by using a commercially available cell proliferation assay kit (CyQuant, Molecular Probes Inc). For determination of collagen content, tissue 4-hydroxyproline levels were determined.
5 Elastin was quantified after tissue extraction by using 0.1% hot oxalic acid with a FASTIN elastin assay (Biocolor Ltd) and proteoglycan-glycosaminoglycan content after tissue extraction with guanidine HCl with a BLYSCAN proteoglycan-glycosaminoglycan assay (Biocolor Ltd).
Molecular weight of the PHO material after explantation was determined by using gel-permeation chromatography. Isolated polymers were dissolved in chloroform at approximately 1 mg/mL, and samples (50 µL) were evaluated by chromatography on a Waters Stryagel HT6E column at a flow rate of 1 mL of chloroform per minute at room temperature by using a refractive index detector. Molecular masses were determined relative to polystyrene standards of narrow polydispersity.
| Results |
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| Discussion |
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Tissue engineering is an interdisciplinary field that applies the principles of engineering and the life sciences toward the development of biologic substitutes that restore, maintain, or improve tissue function.
9 The principal concept is the use of a scaffold material preformed in the shape of the desired organ or structure on which to deliver viable cellular tissue components. Theoretically, the scaffold will provide a temporary biomechanical profile for the replacement tissue until the cells produce their own extracellular matrix. The structural integrity and biomechanical profile for the newly developed tissue structure ultimately depends on this matrix formation. During this process of tissue formation, the scaffold would gradually degrade and resorb and be replaced by the new tissue, eventually leaving no foreign scaffold material within the replaced tissue (Fig 1
).
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In previous experiments we used a combination of PGA and PLA as the scaffold material for the creation of single pulmonary valve leaflets and pulmonary artery segments.
1,2 Despite the rapid degradation time (approximately 6 weeks), this polymer has several drawbacks. The tissue constructs formed on PGA, with or without PLA, was stiff and consequently less desirable for the creation of a 3-leaflet heart valve.
As an alternative polymer scaffold for tissue engineering, this study evaluated PHO. These are naturally occurring thermoplastic polymers, which are biocompatible, resorbable, and extremely flexible and induce only a minimal inflammatory response.
12 In recent experiments of our laboratory, infrarenal aortic segments were replaced by using a seeded copolymer of PGA and nonporous PHO.
13 The favorable results of this study led us to use the same concept for the creation of a 3-leaflet conduit. Experiments with the use of the same copolymer concept on leaflets (PGA-PHO-PGA copolymer) failed because of thrombus formation and lack of good tissue formation on the tissue-engineered leaflets. In an attempt to capitalize on the flexibility and strength of PHO while increasing cell attachment and ingrowth, we used salt leaching to create a porous polymer and to thereby potentially increase cell attachment and ingrowth.
The histologic examination of this study revealed a uniform, organized, fibrous tissue incorporating the conduit wall with an internal endothelial cell lining. Staining showed large amounts of extracellular matrix, including collagen and proteoglycans, in the conduit wall. The biochemical assay for extracellular matrix detected concentrations of collagen, proteoglycans-glycosaminoglycans, and elastin, which exceeded the native pulmonary artery significantly. The leaflets showed a similar histologic pattern with less tissue maturity than the conduit wall but an organized fibrous tissue pattern, with flattened cells corresponding to endothelial cells proximally. In addition, abundant collagen and proteoglycans were present. The explanation for the discrepancy between the elastin assay and the absence of stainable elastin on histologic study is not clear, but it may be due to greater dispersion of elastin in the tissue-engineered conduit than in the native artery.
There was no increase in diameter or length of our constructs over the observed time period. This lack of growth is most likely related to the long degradation time of the PHO. Although no PGA could be detected histologically after 8 weeks in vivo, the PHO used for the conduit wall and the leaflets persisted. The degradation of both polymers, PHO and PGA, is known to occur by hydrolysis.
12 Although this hydrolysis is known to take 6 to 8 weeks for PGA, we now know from recent publications that the degradation and resorption of plain PHO film exceeds 52 weeks.
12 The hydrolysis is theoretically determined by surface area. Unpublished results from our laboratory, however, have shown that although salt leaching increases the surface area of PHO, the rate of degradation of PHO is not altered (Stock and associates, unpublished results). On the basis of these findings, we believe that the ideal polymer for the creation of a 3-leaflet conduit should degrade and resorb faster than the PHO used in these studies.
Active research to alter the surface of PHO by using different manufacturing techniques to improve the degradation time and evaluation of other polyhydroxyalkanoates (Metabolix Inc) are currently underway at this institution, and we are currently attempting to improve the scaffold design by use of techniques such as 3-dimensional printing and injection molding techniques.
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In addition to polymer- and scaffold designrelated limitations, several cell biology issues remain to be clarified. In this and prior experiments we used vascular cells derived from carotid artery explants. It is unlikely that this concept will be applicable to clinical situations, and therefore we are currently investigating the feasibility of using the peripheral vein as the source of donor cells. Mesenchymal stem cells and circulating bone marrowderived endothelial cells
15,16 may represent an additional source of cells. A critical issue in tissue engineering is whether the cell populations in and on the constructs are derived from the cells that were seeded on the leaflets and conduit wall or originate from the proximal and distal native pulmonary artery or from circulating pluripotent stem cells. However, reliable cell-labeling techniques for long-term implantations were not available when these studies were undertaken. A recent publication by Fox and colleagues
17 evaluated for the first time optimal labeling conditions for endothelial cells, yielding greatest fluorescence over time without adversely affecting cell viability. Finally, the production and degradation of extracellular components is an important process in the development and modeling of tissue-engineered structures. In this study biochemical assays revealed significantly increased values for collagen, elastin, and proteoglycan-glycosaminoglycans contents, indicating either an increased matrix deposition, a decreased matrix degradation, or both. Normal matrix protein turnover is mediated by a family of enzymes, the matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), and their natural inhibitors, the tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMPs). The balance of MMP and TIMP activity modulates extracellular matrix remodeling.
18,19 We are currently investigating the activity of MMPs and TIMPs in our tissue-engineered constructs to achieve a better understanding of the complex process of tissue formation and remodeling.
| Conclusion |
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| Appendix: Discussion |
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First, if you make a valved conduit without Valsalva sinuses, a fibrous retraction of the cusps takes place after a few months, whatever the type of tissue-engineered valve. With a longer follow-up, you may be confronted with this complication. If you see it, rather than blaming the valve, I suggest that you make a new conduit with Valsalva sinuses, which will give your tissue-engineered valve the best chance of success.
With regard to the cultivated cells you used, it was not clear whether you used fibroblasts, smooth cells, or endothelial cells. Also, what was the proportion of these different cells and their position in the valve tissue?
Dr Stock. We undertook these experiments as an initial feasibility study to test the concept of tissue engineering of a 3-leaflet heart valve. We are well aware that a normal semilunar valve has the sinuses of Valsalva, and in this case we do not have any sinuses. We are now working with different manufacturers with 3-dimensional printing and injection molding techniques, to make a semilunar valve that really is like an identical copy of a human or an animal heart valve; we then include the sinus.
Dr Carpentier. Very simply, are these cells endothelial cells or are they fibroblast cells?
Dr Stock. We have endothelial cells, and we have mixed cells of smooth muscle cells and fibroblasts. We have two populations.
Dr Carpentier. If you have a mixed population, I am sure you are aware that the fibroblasts may develop at the expense of the endothelial cells. Would it not be better to have only endothelial cells?
Dr Stock. We cultured them separately, and therefore we have one dish with endothelial cells and one dish with smooth muscle cells and fibroblasts. This is a complete separation.
Dr Carpentier. Thank you. I do hope that with the more accurate techniques and materials that we have today, you are going to overcome the problem of tissue retraction that we encountered in the past.
| Footnotes |
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| References |
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