Developing Biomimetic Hydrogels of the Arterial Wall as a Prothrombotic Substrate for In Vitro Human Thrombosis Models

Author:

Ranjbar Jacob1,Njoroge Wanjiku2ORCID,Gibbins Jonathan M.3ORCID,Roach Paul4ORCID,Yang Ying2ORCID,Harper Alan G. S.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Medicine, Keele University, Keele ST5 5BG, UK

2. School of Pharmacy & Bioengineering, Keele University, Keele ST5 5BG, UK

3. Institute for Cardiovascular and Metabolic Research, University of Reading, Reading RG6 6UB, UK

4. Department of Chemistry, School of Science, Loughborough University, Loughborough LE11 3TU, UK

Abstract

Current in vitro thrombosis models utilise simplistic 2D surfaces coated with purified components of the subendothelial matrix. The lack of a realistic humanised model has led to greater study of thrombus formation in in vivo tests in animals. Here we aimed to develop 3D hydrogel-based replicas of the medial and adventitial layers of the human artery to produce a surface that can optimally support thrombus formation under physiological flow conditions. These tissue-engineered medial- (TEML) and adventitial-layer (TEAL) hydrogels were developed by culturing human coronary artery smooth muscle cells and human aortic adventitial fibroblasts within collagen hydrogels, both individually and in co-culture. Platelet aggregation upon these hydrogels was studied using a custom-made parallel flow chamber. When cultured in the presence of ascorbic acid, the medial-layer hydrogels were able to produce sufficient neo-collagen to support effective platelet aggregation under arterial flow conditions. Both TEML and TEAL hydrogels possessed measurable tissue factor activity and could trigger coagulation of platelet-poor plasma in a factor VII-dependent manner. Biomimetic hydrogel replicas of the subendothelial layers of the human artery are effective substrates for a humanised in vitro thrombosis model that could reduce animal experimentation by replacing current in vivo models.

Funder

NC3R- and British Heart Foundation co-funded PhD studentship

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Polymers and Plastics,Organic Chemistry,Biomaterials,Bioengineering

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