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Human endothelial colony‐forming cells expanded with an improved protocol are a useful endothelial cell source for scaffold‐based tissue engineering
Author(s) -
Denecke Bernd,
Horsch Liska D.,
Radtke Stefan,
Fischer Johannes C.,
Horn Peter A.,
Giebel Bernd
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.835
H-Index - 72
eISSN - 1932-7005
pISSN - 1932-6254
DOI - 10.1002/term.1673
Subject(s) - scaffold , tissue engineering , matrigel , microbiology and biotechnology , chemistry , biomedical engineering , cell , biology , biochemistry , medicine
Abstract One of the major challenges in tissue engineering is to supply larger three‐dimensional (3D) bioengineered tissue transplants with sufficient amounts of nutrients and oxygen and to allow metabolite removal. Consequently, artificial vascularization strategies of such transplants are desired. One strategy focuses on endothelial cells capable of initiating new vessel formation, which are settled on scaffolds commonly used in tissue engineering. A bottleneck in this strategy is to obtain sufficient amounts of endothelial cells, as they can be harvested only in small quantities directly from human tissues. Thus, protocols are required to expand appropriate cells in sufficient amounts without interfering with their capability to settle on scaffold materials and to initiate vessel formation. Here, we analysed whether umbilical cord blood (CB)‐derived endothelial colony‐forming cells (ECFCs) fulfil these requirements. In a first set of experiments, we showed that marginally expanded ECFCs settle and survive on different scaffold biomaterials. Next, we improved ECFC culture conditions and developed a protocol for ECFC expansion compatible with 'Good Manufacturing Practice' (GMP) standards. We replaced animal sera with human platelet lysates and used a novel type of tissue‐culture ware. ECFCs cultured under the new conditions revealed significantly lower apoptosis and increased proliferation rates. Simultaneously, their viability was increased. Since extensively expanded ECFCs could still settle on scaffold biomaterials and were able to form tubular structures in Matrigel assays, we conclude that these ex vivo ‐expanded ECFCs are a novel, very potent cell source for scaffold‐based tissue engineering. Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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