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Circulation
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Circulation. 2002;106:I-143-I-150
doi: 10.1161/01.cir.0000032872.55215.05
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(Circulation. 2002;106:I-143.)
© 2002 American Heart Association, Inc.


Thoracic Transplantation and Mechanical Support for Congestive Heart Failure

Tissue Engineering of Functional Trileaflet Heart Valves From Human Marrow Stromal Cells

Simon P. Hoerstrup, MD; Alexander Kadner, MD; Serguei Melnitchouk, MD; Andreas Trojan, MD; Karim Eid, MD; Jay Tracy; Ralf Sodian, MD; Jeroen F. Visjager, PhD; Stefan A. Kolb, MD; Jurg Grunenfelder, MD; Gregor Zund, MD; Marko I. Turina, MD

From the Departments of Cardiovascular Surgery (S.P.H., A.K., S.M., J.T., J.G., G.Z., M.I.T.), Trauma Surgery (A.T.), Internal Medicine (K.E.), and Pathology (S.A.K.), University Hospital, Zurich, Switzerland; Department of Cardiac Surgery, German Heart Institute, Berlin, Germany (R.S.); Department of Biomechanics, Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich, Switzerland (J.F.V.).

Correspondence to Simon Philipp Hoerstrup, MD, Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, University Hospital Zurich, Raemistrasse 100, CH 8091 Zurich, Switzerland. E-mail simon-philipp.hoerstrup{at}chi.usz.ch

Abstract

Background We previously demonstrated the successful tissue engineering and implantation of functioning autologous heart valves based on vascular-derived cells. Human marrow stromal cells (MSC) exhibit the potential to differentiate into multiple cell-lineages and can be easily obtained clinically. The feasibility of creating tissue engineered heart valves (TEHV) from MSC as an alternative cell source, and the impact of a biomimetic in vitro environment on tissue differentiation was investigated.

Methods and Results Human MSC were isolated, expanded in culture, and characterized by flow-cytometry and immunohistochemistry. Trileaflet heart valves fabricated from rapidly bioabsorbable polymers were seeded with MSC and grown in vitro in a pulsatile-flow-bioreactor. Morphological characterization included histology and electron microscopy (EM). Extracellular matrix (ECM)-formation was analyzed by immunohistochemistry, ECM protein content (collagen, glycosaminoglycan) and cell proliferation (DNA) were biochemically quantified. Biomechanical evaluation was performed using InstronTM. In all valves synchronous opening and closing was observed in the bioreactor. Flow-cytometry of MSC pre-seeding was positive for ASMA, vimentin, negative for CD 31, LDL, CD 14. Histology of the TEHV-leaflets demonstrated viable tissue and ECM formation. EM demonstrated cell elements typical of viable, secretionally active myofibroblasts (actin/myosin filaments, collagen fibrils, elastin) and confluent, homogenous tissue surfaces. Collagen types I, III, ASMA, and vimentin were detected in the TEHV-leaflets. Mechanical properties of the TEHV-leaflets were comparable to native tissue.

Conclusion Generation of functional TEHV from human MSC was feasible utilizing a biomimetic in vitro environment. The neo-tissue showed morphological features and mechanical properties of human native-heart-valve tissue. The human MSC demonstrated characteristics of myofibroblast differentiation.


Key Words: tissue engineering • valves • cells • prosthesis