DYNAMIC BIOREACTOR MODEL TO MIMIC EARLY CARDIAC FIBROSIS IN DIABETES

Author:

MARSH SPENCER1,RAUDAT MADELINE1,LEFEBER BETHANY1,HERNDON LAURA BETH1,HERBERT HOWARD1,MCCALLUM LAURA1,SIMIONESCU AGNETA1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Bioengineering, Clemson University, 507 Rhodes Research Center, Clemson, SC 29634, USA

Abstract

In clinical diabetic cardiomyopathy, hyperglycemia and dyslipidemia induce tissue injury, activation of cardiac fibroblasts and interstitial and perivascular fibrosis. Myofibroblasts repair the injured tissue by increasing collagen deposition in the cardiac interstitium and suppressing the activity of matrix metalloproteinases. The goal of this study was to find an ideal model to mimic the effect of high glucose concentration on human cardiac fibroblast activation. The profibrotic role of the transforming growth factor-[Formula: see text] (TGF-[Formula: see text]) and the protective modulation of nitric oxide were examined in two-dimensional and three-dimensional cell culture models, as well as tissue engineering models, that involved the use of cardiac fibroblasts cultured within myocardial matrix scaffolds mounted in a bioreactor that delivered biochemical and mechanical stimuli. Results showed that high glucose levels were potent pro-fibrotic stimuli. In addition, high glucose levels in concert with TGF-[Formula: see text] constituted very strong signals that induced human cardiac fibroblast activation. Cardiac fibroblasts cultured within decellularized myocardial scaffolds and exposed to biochemical and mechanical stimuli represented an adequate model for this pathology. In conclusion, the bioreactor platform was instrumental in establishing an in vitro model of early fibrosis; this platform could be used to test the effects of various agents targeted to mitigate the fibrotic processes.

Funder

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Publisher

World Scientific Pub Co Pte Lt

Subject

Biomedical Engineering

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