In situ endothelialization potential of a biofunctionalised nanocomposite biomaterial-based small diameter bypass graft.

Biomed Mater Eng

Centre for Nanotechnology, Biomaterial and Tissue Engineering, UCL Division of Surgery and Interventional Science, University College London, London, UK.

Published: March 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • Endothelial dysfunction in cardiovascular grafts can lead to graft failure and complications like thrombosis, prompting a study to improve small diameter vascular grafts using a modified nanocomposite material (POSS-PCU) and promote endothelial cell growth.
  • The study biofunctionalised the nanocomposite by attaching a bioactive RGD peptide to enhance its properties and tested its effectiveness through hydrophilicity measurements and cell response with various assays, affirming that RGD facilitated better endothelial cell adherence compared to control peptides (RAD).
  • Results demonstrated increased cell viability and successful endothelialization on the biofunctionalised grafts, confirmed through cell morphology observations (SEM) and specific endothelial markers (CD34, CD31, e

Article Abstract

Endothelial dysfunction or the lack of an endothelium associated with cardiovascular grafts is a major cause of graft failure which is linked to thrombosis and related complications. This study was aimed to (1) biofunctionalise a nanocomposite biomaterial, Polyhedral Oligomeric silsesquioxane modified polycarbonate urea-urethane (POSS-PCU), based small diameter vascular graft and to (2) induce endothelialization with EPC containing monocytes, which were extracted from peripheral blood. (1) Biofunctionalisation of the nanocomposite polymer: bioactive RGD peptide, which is a functional domain of an extracellular matrix component, fibronectin, was synthesised using fmoc chemistry. A lauric acid hydrophobic "tail" was attached to optimise the RGD orientation on the biomaterial. The peptide was cross linked to POSS-PCU. The presence of RGD on the nanocomposite was tested with water contact angle measurements and specificity tests were carried out with the peptide RAD (2) Progenitor cells were extracted from peripheral blood of adult healthy volunteers and cultured on porous biofunctionalised nanocomposite polymer under static conditions. Cells were also introduced to a circuit to which the grafts are connected and non static pulsatile flow conditions were introduced after 72 h following cell introduction. The degree of cell growth was tested with Alamar Blue assay. Endothelialization was confirmed with SEM and by immunostaining for endothelial cell markers, CD34, CD31 and eNOS. Water contact angle measurement indicated that biofunctionalisation had increased hydrophilicity of the nanocomposite polymer. Alamar blue indicated a greater presence of cells on biofunctionalised nanocomposite and this relative increase in cell viability was specific to RGD as confirmed with RAD peptides. SEM provided evidence for endothelial cell morphology and this was confirmed with endothelial cell markers with immunostaining. Biofunctionalised nanocomposite polymer-based small diameter bypass graft demonstrated the potential for relatively rapid endothelialization from cells extracted from peripheral blood.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/BME-2009-0597DOI Listing

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