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Angiogenesis in Patches and Injectable Biomaterials for Cardiac Repair

Treatment of cardiac diseases involves transplantation of donor hearts, since the damaged heart has limited self-regeneration potential. An alternative treatment option has emerged as engineered cardiac tissues, grown in vitro by cultivation of cardiac cells on biomaterials, have comparable properties to native myocardium and can be implanted for cardiac repair. Major current limitations are a viable cell source and adequate vascularization to support cell survival. In this thesis, two proangiogenic biomaterials, a scaffold and a hydrogel, were developed to achieve vascularization in vitro and in vivo for cardiac repair. Scaffold patches are suitable for repairing congestive heart failure or congenital malformations, while injectable biomaterials allow minimally-invasive treatment post-myocardial infarction (MI). In the first aim, a collagen scaffold with covalently immobilized vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) was developed, and improved cell mobilization, survival and proliferation when used for free wall repair in adult rats. This increased angiogenesis, which aided in retaining the biomaterial size to allow tissue growth. In the second aim, a collagen-chitosan hydrogel with encapsulated thymosin β4 (Tβ4) was developed to 1) recruit cells from the heart epicardium for repair post-MI in vivo, and 2) guide capillary outgrowths from arteries and veins to form oriented capillary structure for in vitro cardiac tissue engineering. Results showed that the encapsulation of Tβ4 into collagen-chitosan hydrogels led to cell outgrowths from rat or mouse cardiac explants in vitro. A portion of the recruited cells were CD31-positive endothelial cells (ECs) that formed tubes. The hydrogel was injected in vivo to increase vascularization and number of cardiomyocytes within the infarct area post-MI, which improved left ventricular wall thickness. Tβ4-hydrogel also promoted the outgrowth of capillaries from vascular explants that followed the direction of the hydrogel-coated grooves of a micropatterned polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) substrate. These capillary outgrowths eventually formed a vascular bed for engineering vascularized cardiac tissues. This thesis presents two bioinstructive biomaterials with sustained and localized delivery of angiogenic molecules to be used for in situ cardiac repair based on improved vascularization. The use of cell-free bioactive materials overcomes limitations of cell isolation and expansion as required for cell therapies or implantation of engineered tissues.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:TORONTO/oai:tspace.library.utoronto.ca:1807/33960
Date11 December 2012
CreatorsChiu, Loraine
ContributorsRadisic, Milica
Source SetsUniversity of Toronto
Languageen_ca
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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