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An in vitro model mimics the contact of biomaterials to blood components and the reaction of surrounding soft tissue.

Authors :
Jannasch, Maren
Gaetzner, Sabine
Groeber, Florian
Weigel, Tobias
Walles, Heike
Schmitz, Tobias
Hansmann, Jan
Source :
Acta Biomaterialia; Apr2019, Vol. 89, p227-241, 15p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Graphical abstract Abstract The therapeutic efficacy of a medical product after implantation depends strongly on the host-initiated fibrotic response (foreign body reaction). For novel biomaterials, it is of high relevance to understand this fibrotic process. As an alternative to in vivo studies, in vitro models mimic parts of the whole foreign body reaction. Aim of this study was to develop a wound model with key cells and matrix proteins in coculture. This approach combined blood components such as primary macrophages in a plasma-derived fibrin hydrogel, directly exposed to reference biomaterials (PTFE, glass, titanium). The soft tissue reaction is resembled by integrating fibroblasts in a collagen or a fibrin matrix. Those two experimental setups were conducted to show whether a long-term in vitro culture of 13 days is feasible. The response to reference biomaterials was assessed by multi-parametric analyses, comprising molecular profiling (cytokines, collagen I and ß-actin) and tissue remodeling (cell adherence, histological structure, tissue deposition). Polytetrafluorethylene (PTFE) and titanium were tested as references to correlate the in vitro evaluation to previous in vivo studies. Most striking, both model setups evaluated references' fibrotic characteristics as previously reported by in vivo studies. Statement of Significance We present a test platform applied for assessments on the foreign body reaction to biomaterials. This test system consists of blood components – macrophages and plasma-derived fibrin - as well as fibroblasts and collagen, generating a three-dimensional wound microenvironment. By this modular approach, we achieved a suitable test for long-term studies and overcame the limited short-term stability of whole blood tests. In contrast to previous models, macrophages' viability is maintained during the extended culture period and excels the quality of the model. The potential to evaluate a foreign body reaction in vitro was demonstrated with defined reference materials. This model system might be of high potential as a screening platform to identify novel biomaterial candidates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17427061
Volume :
89
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Acta Biomaterialia
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
135915047
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2019.03.029