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Biomaterial-driven in situ cardiovascular tissue engineering : a multi-disciplinary perspective

TLDR
The main current challenges for in situ cardiovascular regeneration are pinpointed and further address, namely the achievement of tissue homeostasis, the development of predictive models for long-term performances of the implanted grafts, and the necessity for stratification for successful clinical translation.
Abstract
There is a persistent and growing clinical need for readily-available substitutes for heart valves and small-diameter blood vessels. In situ tissue engineering is emerging as a disruptive new technology, providing ready-to-use biodegradable, cell-free constructs which are designed to induce regeneration upon implantation, directly in the functional site. The induced regenerative process hinges around the host response to the implanted biomaterial and the interplay between immune cells, stem/progenitor cell and tissue cells in the microenvironment provided by the scaffold in the hemodynamic environment. Recapitulating the complex tissue microstructure and function of cardiovascular tissues is a highly challenging target. Therein the scaffold plays an instructive role, providing the microenvironment that attracts and harbors host cells, modulating the inflammatory response, and acting as a temporal roadmap for new tissue to be formed. Moreover, the biomechanical loads imposed by the hemodynamic environment play a pivotal role. Here, we provide a multidisciplinary view on in situ cardiovascular tissue engineering using synthetic scaffolds; starting from the state-of-the art, the principles of the biomaterial-driven host response and wound healing and the cellular players involved, toward the impact of the biomechanical, physical, and biochemical microenvironmental cues that are given by the scaffold design. To conclude, we pinpoint and further address the main current challenges for in situ cardiovascular regeneration, namely the achievement of tissue homeostasis, the development of predictive models for long-term performances of the implanted grafts, and the necessity for stratification for successful clinical translation.

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Minimally Invasive and Regenerative Therapeutics

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Next-generation tissue-engineered heart valves with repair, remodelling and regeneration capacity

TL;DR: An unmet clinical need remains for valve replacements with regenerative, remodelling and growth potential, and next-generation tissue-engineered heart valves (TEHVs) are a promising therapeutic option for patients with valvular heart disease.
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Collagen-Based Tissue Engineering Strategies for Vascular Medicine.

TL;DR: The current state of the art about the use of collagen-based strategies, mainly as a coating material for the functionalization of vascular graft luminal surface, as a drug delivery system for the release of pro-endothelialization factors, and as physiologically relevant in vitro vascular models, and the future trend in this field of research will be presented and discussed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A multilayered synthetic human elastin/polycaprolactone hybrid vascular graft with tailored mechanical properties

TL;DR: It is shown that tropoelastin enhances endothelial cell attachment and proliferation and is incorporated into a synthetic elastin/polycaprolactone conduit with mechanical properties optimized to mimic the human internal mammary artery, including permeability, compliance, elastic modulus and burst pressure.
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Substrates for cardiovascular tissue engineering.

TL;DR: Key requirements and properties of these substrates, as well as methods and readout parameters to test their efficacy in the human body, are described in detail and discussed in the light of current trends toward designing biologically inspired microenviroments for in situ tissue engineering purposes.
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The Effect of Incorporation of SDF-1α into PLGA Scaffolds on Stem Cell Recruitment and the Inflammatory Response

TL;DR: Results support that enhanced recruitment of autologous stem cells can improve the tissue responses to biomaterial implants through modifying/bypassing inflammatory cell responses and jumpstarting stem cell participation in healing at the implant interface.
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Electrospun cellular microenvironments: Understanding controlled release and scaffold structure.

TL;DR: Electrospinning is a versatile technique in tissue engineering for the production of scaffolds that enables cell proliferation and ingrowth, whereas fiber diameter predominantly influences cell fate, and pore size is far more relevant as a structural parameter than previously recognized.
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Production of Type VI Collagen by Human Macrophages: A New Dimension in Macrophage Functional Heterogeneity

TL;DR: It is suggested that the production of type VI collagen is a marker for a nondestructive, matrix-conserving macrophage phenotype that could profoundly influence physiological and pathophysiological conditions in vivo.
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