Relative Effects of Fluid Oscillations and Nutrient Transport in the In Vitro Growth of Valvular Tissues

  • Manuel Salinas
  • , Sasmita Rath
  • , Ana G. Villegas
  • , V. Unnikrishnan
  • , Sharan Ramaswamy

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Engineered valvular tissues are cultured dynamically, and involve specimen movement. We previously demonstrated that oscillatory shear stresses (OSS) under combined steady flow and specimen cyclic flexure (flex-flow) promote tissue formation. However, localized efficiency of specimen mass transport is also important in the context of cell viability within the growing tissues. Here, we investigated the delivery of two essential species for cell survival, glucose and oxygen, to 3-dimensional (3D) engineered valvular tissues. We applied a convective-diffusive model to characterize glucose and oxygen mass transport with and without valve-like specimen flexural movement. We found the mass transport effects for glucose and oxygen to be negligible for scaffold porosities typically present during in vitro experiments and non-essential unless the porosity was unusually low (0.05). Based on this result, we conducted an experiment using bone marrow stem cell (BMSC)-seeded scaffolds under Pulsatile flow-alone states to permit OSS without any specimen movement. BMSC-seeded specimen collagen from the pulsatile flow and flex-flow environments were subsequently found to be comparable (p > 0.05) and exhibited some gene expression similarities. We conclude that a critical magnitude of fluid-induced, OSS created by either pulsatile flow or flex-flow conditions, particularly when the oscillations are physiologically-relevant, is the direct, principal stimulus that promotes engineered valvular tissues and its phenotype, whereas mass transport benefits derived from specimen movement are minimal.

    Original languageAmerican English
    Pages (from-to)170-181
    Number of pages12
    JournalCardiovascular Engineering Technology
    Volume7
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Feb 8 2016

    Bibliographical note

    Publisher Copyright:
    © 2016, Biomedical Engineering Society.

    Funding

    The authors acknowledge funds received from the department of Biomedical Engineering at Florida International University to carry out this research work. Funding for M.S. by NIH/NIGMS R25 GM061347 is gratefully acknowledged.

    FundersFunder number
    National Institutes of Health
    National Institute of General Medical SciencesR25GM061347

      ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

      • Biomedical Engineering
      • Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

      Keywords

      • Computational fluid dynamics
      • Glucose and oxygen
      • Heart valve tissue engineering
      • Mass transport
      • Oscillatory shear stresses
      • Porosity

      Disciplines

      • Computer Sciences

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