Fibrous scaffolds, which can mimic the elastic and anisotropic mechanical properties of native tissues, hold great promise in recapitulating the native tissue microenvironment. We previously fabricated electrospun fibrous scaffolds made of hybrid synthetic elastomers (poly(1,3‐diamino‐2‐hydroxypropane‐co‐glycerol sebacate)‐co‐poly (ethylene glycol) (APS‐co‐PEG) and polycaprolactone (PCL)) to obtain uniaxial mechanical properties similar to those of human aortic valve leaflets. However, conventional electrospinning process often yields scaffolds with random alignment, which fails to recreate the anisotropic nature of most of the soft tissues such as native heart valves. Inspired by the structure of native valve leaflet, we designed a novel valve leaflet‐inspired ring‐shaped collector to modulate the electrospun fiber alignment and studied the effect of polymer formulation (PEG amount [mole %] in APS‐co‐PEG; ratio between APS‐co‐PEG and PCL; and total polymer concentration) in tuning the biaxial mechanical properties of the fibrous scaffolds. The fibrous scaffolds collected on the ring‐shaped collector displayed anisotropic biaxial mechanical properties, suggesting that their biaxial mechanical properties are closely associated with the fiber alignment in the scaffold. Additionally, the scaffold stiffness was easily tuned by changing the composition and concentration of the polymer blend. Human valvular interstitial cells (hVICs) cultured on these anisotropic scaffolds displayed aligned morphology as instructed by the fiber alignment. Overall, we generated a library of biologically relevant fibrous scaffolds with tunable mechanical properties, which will guide the cellular alignment.
The existence of endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) in peripheral blood and its involvement in vasculogenesis was first reported by Ashara and colleagues. Later, others documented the existence of similar types of EPCs originating from bone marrow. More recently, Yoder and Ingram showed that EPCs derived from umbilical cord blood had a higher proliferative potential compared to ones isolated from adult peripheral blood. Apart from being involved in postnatal vasculogenesis, EPCs have also shown promise as a cell source for creating tissue-engineered vascular and heart valve constructs. Various isolation protocols exist, some of which involve the cell sorting of mononuclear cells (MNCs) derived from the sources mentioned earlier with the help of endothelial and hematopoietic markers, or culturing these MNCs with specialized endothelial growth medium, or a combination of these techniques. Here, we present a protocol for the isolation and culture of EPCs using specialized endothelial medium supplemented with growth factors, without the use of immunosorting, followed by the characterization of the isolated cells using Western blotting and immunostaining.
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