Towards bioengineered skeletal muscle: recent developments in vitro and in vivo

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anita Quigley ◽  
Catherine Ngan ◽  
Kate Firipis ◽  
Cathal D. O’Connell ◽  
Elena Pirogova ◽  
...  

Abstract Skeletal muscle is a functional tissue that accounts for approximately 40% of the human body mass. It has remarkable regenerative potential, however, trauma and volumetric muscle loss, progressive disease and aging can lead to significant muscle loss that the body cannot recover from. Clinical approaches to address this range from free-flap transfer for traumatic events involving volumetric muscle loss, to myoblast transplantation and gene therapy to replace muscle loss due to sarcopenia and hereditary neuromuscular disorders, however, these interventions are often inadequate. The adoption of engineering paradigms, in particular materials engineering and materials/tissue interfacing in biology and medicine, has given rise to the rapidly growing, multidisciplinary field of bioengineering. These methods have facilitated the development of new biomaterials that sustain cell growth and differentiation based on bionic biomimicry in naturally occurring and synthetic hydrogels and polymers, as well as additive fabrication methods to generate scaffolds that go some way to replicate the structural features of skeletal muscle. Recent advances in biofabrication techniques have resulted in significant improvements to some of these techniques and have also offered promising alternatives for the engineering of living muscle constructs ex vivo to address the loss of significant areas of muscle. This review highlights current research in this area and discusses the next steps required towards making muscle biofabrication a clinical reality.

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suradip Das ◽  
Kevin D. Browne ◽  
Franco A. Laimo ◽  
Joseph C. Maggiore ◽  
Halimulati Kaisaier ◽  
...  

AbstractVolumetric Muscle Loss (VML) is defined as traumatic or surgical loss of skeletal muscle tissue beyond the inherent regenerative capacity of the body, generally leading to a severe functional deficit. Autologous muscle grafts remain the prevalent method of treatment whereas recent muscle repair techniques using biomaterials and tissue engineering are still at a nascent stage and have multiple challenges to address to ensure functional recovery of the injured muscle. Indeed, appropriate somato-motor innervations remain one of the biggest challenges for both autologous muscle grafts as well as tissue engineered muscle constructs. We aim to address this challenge by developing Pre-Innervated Tissue Engineered Muscle comprised of long aligned networks of spinal motor neurons and skeletal myocytes. Here, we developed methodology to biofabricate long fibrils of pre-innervated tissue engineered muscle using a co-culture of myocytes and motor neurons on aligned nanofibrous scaffolds. Motor neurons lead to enhanced differentiation and maturation of skeletal myocytes in vitro. These pre-innervated tissue engineered muscle constructs when implanted in vivo in a rat VML model significantly increase satellite cell migration, micro-vessel formation, and neuromuscular junction density in the host muscle near the injury area at an acute time point as compared to non-pre-innervated myocyte constructs and nanofiber scaffolds alone. These pro-regenerative effects can potentially lead to enhanced functional neuromuscular regeneration following VML, thereby improving the levels of functional recovery following these devastating injuries.


2012 ◽  
Vol 82 (3) ◽  
pp. 228-232 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mauro Serafini ◽  
Giuseppa Morabito

Dietary polyphenols have been shown to scavenge free radicals, modulating cellular redox transcription factors in different in vitro and ex vivo models. Dietary intervention studies have shown that consumption of plant foods modulates plasma Non-Enzymatic Antioxidant Capacity (NEAC), a biomarker of the endogenous antioxidant network, in human subjects. However, the identification of the molecules responsible for this effect are yet to be obtained and evidences of an antioxidant in vivo action of polyphenols are conflicting. There is a clear discrepancy between polyphenols (PP) concentration in body fluids and the extent of increase of plasma NEAC. The low degree of absorption and the extensive metabolism of PP within the body have raised questions about their contribution to the endogenous antioxidant network. This work will discuss the role of polyphenols from galenic preparation, food extracts, and selected dietary sources as modulators of plasma NEAC in humans.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasamin A. Jodat ◽  
Ting Zhang ◽  
Ziad Al Tanoury ◽  
Tom Kamperman ◽  
Kun Shi ◽  
...  

Abstract Engineering of biomimetic tissue implants provides an opportunity for repairing volumetric muscle loss (VML), beyond a tissue’s innate repair capacity. Here, we present thick, suturable, and pre-vascularized 3D muscle implants containing human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived myogenic precursor cells (hiPSC-MPCs), which can differentiate into skeletal muscle cells while maintaining a self-renewing pool. The formation of contractile myotubes and millimeter-long fibers from hiPSC-MPCs is achieved in chemically, mechanically, and structurally tailored extracellular matrix-based hydrogels, which can serve as scaffolds to ultimately organize the linear fusion of myoblasts. Embedded multi-material bioprinting is used to deposit complex patterns of perfusable vasculatures and aligned hiPSC-MPC channels within an endomysium-like supporting gel to recapitulate muscle architectural integrity in a facile yet highly rapid manner. Moreover, we demonstrate successful graft-host integration and de novo muscle formation upon in vivo implantation of pre-vascularized constructs within a VML model. This work pioneers the engineering of large pre-vascularized hiPSC-derived muscle tissues toward next generation VML regenerative therapies.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (9) ◽  
pp. 2731-2743
Author(s):  
Yang Gao ◽  
Tianxu Zhang ◽  
Junyao Zhu ◽  
Dexuan Xiao ◽  
Mei Zhang ◽  
...  

The challenges associated with muscle degenerative diseases and volumetric muscle loss (VML) emphasizes the prospects of muscle tissue regeneration.


2017 ◽  
Vol 14 (127) ◽  
pp. 20160992 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Zeller-Plumhoff ◽  
T. Roose ◽  
G. F. Clough ◽  
P. Schneider

The supply of oxygen in sufficient quantity is vital for the correct functioning of all organs in the human body, in particular for skeletal muscle during exercise. Disease is often associated with both an inhibition of the microvascular supply capability and is thought to relate to changes in the structure of blood vessel networks. Different methods exist to investigate the influence of the microvascular structure on tissue oxygenation, varying over a range of application areas, i.e. biological in vivo and in vitro experiments, imaging and mathematical modelling. Ideally, all of these methods should be combined within the same framework in order to fully understand the processes involved. This review discusses the mathematical models of skeletal muscle oxygenation currently available that are based upon images taken of the muscle microvasculature in vivo and ex vivo . Imaging systems suitable for capturing the blood vessel networks are discussed and respective contrasting methods presented. The review further informs the association between anatomical characteristics in health and disease. With this review we give the reader a tool to understand and establish the workflow of developing an image-based model of skeletal muscle oxygenation. Finally, we give an outlook for improvements needed for measurements and imaging techniques to adequately investigate the microvascular capability for oxygen exchange.


2004 ◽  
Vol 287 (5) ◽  
pp. R1270-R1275 ◽  
Author(s):  
Asensio A. Gonzalez ◽  
Reetu Kumar ◽  
Jacob D. Mulligan ◽  
Ashley J. Davis ◽  
Kurt W. Saupe

Although a diminished ability of tissues and organisms to tolerate stress is a clinically important hallmark of normal aging, little is known regarding its biochemical basis. Our goal was to determine whether age-associated changes in AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), a key regulator of cellular metabolism during the stress response, might contribute to the poor stress tolerance of aged cardiac and skeletal muscle. Basal AMPK activity and the degree of activation of AMPK by AMP and by in vivo hypoxemia (arterial Po2 of 39 mmHg) were measured in cardiac and skeletal muscle (gastrocnemius) from 5- and 24-mo-old C57Bl/6 mice. In the heart, neither basal AMPK activity nor its allosteric activation by AMP was affected by age. However, after 10 min of hypoxemia, the activity of α2-AMPK, but not α1-AMPK, was significantly higher in the hearts from old than from young mice ( P < 0.005), this difference being due to differences in phosphorylation of α2-AMPK. Significant activation of AMPK in the young hearts did not occur until 30 min of hypoxemia ( P < 0.01), stress that was poorly tolerated by the old mice (mortality = 67%). In contrast, AMPK activity in gastrocnemius muscle was unaffected by age or hypoxemia. We conclude that the age-associated decline in hypoxic tolerance in cardiac and skeletal muscle is not caused by changes in basal AMPK activity or a blunted AMPK response to hypoxia. Activation of AMPK by in vivo hypoxia is slower and more modest than might be predicted from in vitro and ex vivo experiments.


Gels ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 171
Author(s):  
Catherine G. Y. Ngan ◽  
Anita Quigley ◽  
Richard J. Williams ◽  
Cathal D. O’Connell ◽  
Romane Blanchard ◽  
...  

For decades, the study of tissue-engineered skeletal muscle has been driven by a clinical need to treat neuromuscular diseases and volumetric muscle loss. The in vitro fabrication of muscle offers the opportunity to test drug-and cell-based therapies, to study disease processes, and to perhaps, one day, serve as a muscle graft for reconstructive surgery. This study developed a biofabrication technique to engineer muscle for research and clinical applications. A bioprinting protocol was established to deliver primary mouse myoblasts in a gelatin methacryloyl (GelMA) bioink, which was implanted in an in vivo chamber in a nude rat model. For the first time, this work demonstrated the phenomenon of myoblast migration through the bioprinted GelMA scaffold with cells spontaneously forming fibers on the surface of the material. This enabled advanced maturation and facilitated the connection between incoming vessels and nerve axons in vivo without the hindrance of a scaffold material. Immunohistochemistry revealed the hallmarks of tissue maturity with sarcomeric striations and peripherally placed nuclei in the organized bundles of muscle fibers. Such engineered muscle autografts could, with further structural development, eventually be used for surgical reconstructive purposes while the methodology presented here specifically has wide applications for in vitro and in vivo neuromuscular function and disease modelling.


2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian Carson ◽  
Robert Davies ◽  
Joseph Bass ◽  
Catherine Norton ◽  
Bijal Patel ◽  
...  

Objective The aim of this research was the development and validation of a translational model for the evaluation of exercise and nutrient stimulated muscle protein synthesis (MPS). To achieve this overall aim, three primary objectives had to be realised: (i) Development of an in vitro skeletal muscle cell bioassay to measure muscle growth and MPS; (ii) Development of an ex vivo model to evaluate the humoral effect on MPS in response to nutrient feeding and exercise; (iii) Use of a stable isotope technique to evaluate MPS in response to nutrient feeding and exercise in vivo. Methods To develop a novel in vitro skeletal muscle cell bioassay to measure muscle growth and MPS, C2C12 myoblasts were proliferated and subsequently differentiated to myotubes over 8 days in DMEM (2% HS). Changes in cell behavior and adhesion properties were monitored by measuring impedance via interdigitated microelectrodes using the xCELLigence system. MPS was measured by puromycin incorporation using the SUnSET technique, intracellular signalling measured by western blot, and myotube thickness by microscopy. To demonstrate the capability to monitor nutrient regulation of muscle growth, media was conditioned with a known potent regulator of MPS (leucine) in a dose response experiment (0.20 - 2.0 mM). To establish the ability of the bioassay to measure the humoral effect of MPS in response to feeding and exercise, media was conditioned by ex vivo human serum from fasted, rested, fed (protein and isonitrogenous non-essential amino acid (NEAA) control)  and post-exercise conditions. To evaluate MPS in response to nutrient feeding and exercise in vivo, acute MPS (5 h) was assessed by measuring stable isotope deuterium oxide (D2O) incorporation into m. vastus lateralis skeletal muscle following consumption of either a Whey Protein (WP) or an isonitrogenous NEAA control combined with resistance exercise in resistance trained males. Results In vitro experiments observed a dose-response effect with a 32 % increase in cell index and a 27 % increase in cell thickness after 2 h in the presence of 2.0 mM leucine when compared with control myotubes. Ex vivo serum following ingestion of NEAA had no effect on protein signalling or MPS whereas WP fed serum significantly increased mTOR, P70S6K and 4E-BP1 phosphorylation (p<0.01, p<0.05) compared to fasted serum. Furthermore, the effect of WP fed serum on protein signalling and MPS was significantly increased (p<0.01, p<0.05) compared to NEAA fed serum.  Ex vivo human serum following resistance exercise was also increased MPS (29 %) and phosphorylation of mTOR (6 %), p70S6K (12 %) and 4EBP1 (7 %), compared with resting serum. These ex vivo/in vitro findings translated to the in vivo model as myofibrillar fractional synthetic rates (myoFSR) (Basal 0.068±0.002%h-1 vs. WP 0.084±0.006 %h-1, p=0.033) and absolute synthetic rates (ASR) (Basal 10.34±1.01 vs. WP 13.18±0.71 g.day-1, p=0.026) were increased from basal levels only when resistance exercise was combined with WP ingestion and not the NEAA control (NEAA MPS 0.072±0.004%h-1, NEAA ASR 10.23±0.80 g.day-1).  Thus, ingestion of WP in combination with resistance training augments acute MPS responses in resistance trained young men. Conclusions We have developed a translational model of muscle protein synthetic bioactivity using in vitro, ex vivo and in vivo methodologies. We have shown that we can impact MPS in vitro using ex vivo human serum to condition media, that MPS in vitro is differentially regulated by ex vivo serum containing bioactive WP compared to a non-bioactive NEAA control, and that this tranlates for resistance exercise combined with WP in humans when MyoFSR is measured using stable isotope technology.  These experiments demonstrate that ex vivo/in vitro experiments translate to the in vivo model and these methods can be used to inform both exercise and nutrient human interventions. 


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthias Miederer ◽  
Stefanie Pektor ◽  
Isabelle Miederer ◽  
Nicole Bausbacher ◽  
Isabell Sofia Keil ◽  
...  

Abstract Background RNA-based vaccination strategies tailoring immune response to specific reactions have become an important pillar for a broad range of applications. Recently, the use of lipid-based nanoparticles opened the possibility to deliver RNA to specific sites within the body, overcoming the limitation of rapid degradation in the bloodstream. Here, we have investigated whether small animal PET/MRI can be employed to image the biodistribution of RNA-encoded protein. For this purpose, a reporter RNA coding for the sodium-iodide-symporter (NIS) was in vitro transcribed in cell lines and evaluated for expression. RNA-lipoplex nanoparticles were then assembled by complexing RNA with liposomes at different charge ratios, and functional NIS protein translation was imaged and quantified in vivo and ex vivo by Iodine-124 PET upon intravenous administration in mice. Results NIS expression was detected on the membrane of two cell lines as early as 6 h after transfection and gradually decreased over 48 h. In vivo and ex vivo PET/MRI of anionic spleen-targeting or cationic lung-targeting NIS-RNA lipoplexes revealed a visually detectable rapid increase of Iodine-124 uptake in the spleen or lung compared to control-RNA-lipoplexes, respectively, with minimal background in other organs except from thyroid, stomach and salivary gland. Conclusions The strong organ selectivity and high target-to-background acquisition of NIS-RNA lipoplexes indicate the feasibility of small animal PET/MRI to quantify organ-specific delivery of RNA.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yumi Abiko ◽  
Yusuke Katayama ◽  
Wenyang Zhao ◽  
Sawako Horai ◽  
Kenji Sakurai ◽  
...  

AbstractA previous study by our group indicated that methylmercury (MeHg) is biotransformed to bismethylmercury sulfide [(MeHg)2S)] by interaction with reactive sulfur species (RSS) produced in the body. In the present study, we explored the transformation of MeHg to (MeHg)2S in the gut and the subsequent fate of (MeHg)2S in vitro and in vivo. An ex vivo experiment suggested the possibility of the extracellular transformation of MeHg to (MeHg)2S in the distal colon, and accordingly, the MeHg sulfur adduct was detected in the intestinal contents and feces of mice administered MeHg, suggesting that (MeHg)2S is formed through reactions between MeHg and RSS in the gut. In a cell-free system, we found that (MeHg)2S undergoes degradation in a time-dependent manner, resulting in the formation of mercury sulfide and dimethylmercury (DMeHg), as determined by X-ray diffraction and gas chromatography/mass spectrometry, respectively. We also identified DMeHg in the expiration after the intraperitoneal administration of (MeHg)2S to mice. Thus, our present study identified a new fate of MeHg through (MeHg)2S as an intermediate, which leads to conversion of volatile DMeHg in the body.


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