Surgery (St Vincent's) - Research Publications

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    Engineering transplantable human lymphatic and blood capillary networks in a porous scaffold
    Kong, AM ; Lim, SY ; Palmer, JA ; Rixon, A ; Gerrand, Y-W ; Yap, KK ; Morrison, WA ; Mitchell, GM (SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC, 2022-12)
    Due to a relative paucity of studies on human lymphatic assembly in vitro and subsequent in vivo transplantation, capillary formation and survival of primary human lymphatic (hLEC) and blood endothelial cells (hBEC) ± primary human vascular smooth muscle cells (hvSMC) were evaluated and compared in vitro and in vivo. hLEC ± hvSMC or hBEC ± hvSMC were seeded in a 3D porous scaffold in vitro, and capillary percent vascular volume (PVV) and vascular density (VD)/mm2 assessed. Scaffolds were also transplanted into a sub-cutaneous rat wound with morphology/morphometry assessment. Initially hBEC formed a larger vessel network in vitro than hLEC, with interconnected capillaries evident at 2 days. Interconnected lymphatic capillaries were slower (3 days) to assemble. hLEC capillaries demonstrated a significant overall increase in PVV (p = 0.0083) and VD (p = 0.0039) in vitro when co-cultured with hvSMC. A similar increase did not occur for hBEC + hvSMC in vitro, but hBEC + hvSMC in vivo significantly increased PVV (p = 0.0035) and VD (p = 0.0087). Morphology/morphometry established that hLEC vessels maintained distinct cell markers, and demonstrated significantly increased individual vessel and network size, and longer survival than hBEC capillaries in vivo, and established inosculation with rat lymphatics, with evidence of lymphatic function. The porous polyurethane scaffold provided advantages to capillary network formation due to its large (300-600 μm diameter) interconnected pores, and sufficient stability to ensure successful surgical transplantation in vivo. Given their successful survival and function in vivo within the porous scaffold, in vitro assembled hLEC networks using this method are potentially applicable to clinical scenarios requiring replacement of dysfunctional or absent lymphatic networks.
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    Hypoxic preconditioning of myoblasts implanted in a tissue engineering chamber significantly increases local angiogenesis via upregulation of myoblast vascular endothelial growth factor-A expression and downregulation of miRNA-1, miRNA-206 and angiopoietin-1
    Taylor, CJ ; Church, JE ; Williams, MD ; Gerrand, Y-W ; Keramidaris, E ; Palmer, JA ; Galea, LA ; Penington, AJ ; Morrison, WA ; Mitchell, GM (WILEY, 2018-01)
    Vascularization is a major hurdle for growing three-dimensional tissue engineered constructs. This study investigated the mechanisms involved in hypoxic preconditioning of primary rat myoblasts in vitro and their influence on local angiogenesis postimplantation. Primary rat myoblast cultures were exposed to 90 min hypoxia at <1% oxygen followed by normoxia for 24 h. Real time (RT) polymerase chain reaction evaluation indicated that 90 min hypoxia resulted in significant downregulation of miR-1 and miR-206 (p < 0.05) and angiopoietin-1 (p < 0.05) with upregulation of vascular endothelial growth factor-A (VEGF-A; p < 0.05). The miR-1 and angiopoietin-1 responses remained significantly downregulated after a 24 h rest phase. In addition, direct inhibition of miR-206 in L6 myoblasts caused a significant increase in VEGF-A expression (p < 0.05), further establishing that changes in VEGF-A expression are influenced by miR-206. Of the myogenic genes examined, MyoD was significantly upregulated, only after 24 h rest (p < 0.05). Preconditioned or control myoblasts were implanted with Matrigel™ into isolated bilateral tissue engineering chambers incorporating a flow-through epigastric vascular pedicle in severe combined immunodeficiency mice and the chamber tissue harvested 14 days later. Chambers implanted with preconditioned myoblasts had a significantly increased percentage volume of blood vessels (p = 0.0325) compared with chambers implanted with control myoblasts. Hypoxic preconditioned myoblasts promote vascularization of constructs via VEGF upregulation and downregulation of angiopoietin-1, miR-1 and miR-206. The relatively simple strategy of hypoxic preconditioning of implanted cells - including non-stem cell types - has broad, future applications in tissue engineering of skeletal muscle and other tissues, as a technique to significantly increase implant site angiogenesis.
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    Surface-bound collagen 4 is significantly more stable than collagen 1
    Stynes, GD ; Kiroff, GK ; Page, RS ; Morrison, WA ; Kirkland, MA (WILEY, 2017-05)
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    Collagen immunoassay as a method to optimise surface functionalisation
    Stynes, G ; Kiroff, G ; Morrison, W ; Kirkland, M (WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH, 2017-09)
    Traditional methods of assessing surface functionalisation, including spectroscopy and chemical labelling, often involve significant error and conjecture about bonds. Proteins that improve cell attachment have specific pKa's and optimum binding requirements that may differ from the conditions required for chemical labelling. The utility of collagen ELISA to optimise acetaldehyde glow discharge polymerisation reactor parameters was tested. Accurate stepwise increases in collagen conjugation strength were demonstrated by incubating specimens in 8 M urea for 5–8 days followed by ELISA to test for residual surface collagen. Surface modifications also were assessed by XPS. The results indicated that ELISA after bond‐stressing with urea may suffice for optimising surface functionalisation and that traditional methods of analysis may be superfluous if protein conjugation is the aim of functionalisation.
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    Hair transplantation in mice: Challenges and solutions
    Asgari, AZ ; Rufaut, NW ; Morrison, WA ; Dilley, RJ ; Knudsen, R ; Jones, LN ; Sinclair, RD (WILEY-BLACKWELL, 2016-07)
    Hair follicle cells contribute to wound healing, skin circulation, and skin diseases including skin cancer, and hair transplantation is a useful technique to study the participation of hair follicle cells in skin homeostasis and wound healing. Although hair follicle transplantation is a well-established human hair-restoration procedure, follicular transplantation techniques in animals have a number of shortcomings and have not been well described or optimized. To facilitate the study of follicular stem and progenitor cells and their interaction with surrounding skin, we have established a new murine transplantation model, similar to follicular unit transplantation in humans. Vibrissae from GFP transgenic mice were harvested, flip-side microdissected, and implanted individually into needle hole incisions in the back skin of immune-deficient nude mice. Grafts were evaluated histologically and the growth of transplanted vibrissae was observed. Transplanted follicles cycled spontaneously and newly formed hair shafts emerged from the skin after 2 weeks. Ninety percent of grafted vibrissae produced a hair shaft at 6 weeks. After pluck-induced follicle cycling, growth rates were equivalent to ungrafted vibrissae. Transplanted vibrissae with GFP-positive cells were easily identified in histological sections. We established a follicular vibrissa transplantation method that recapitulates human follicular unit transplantation. This method has several advantages over current protocols for animal hair transplantation. The method requires no suturing and minimizes the damage to donor follicles and recipient skin. Vibrissae are easier to microdissect and transplant than pelage follicles and, once transplanted, are readily distinguished from host pelage hair. This facilitates measurement of hair growth. Flip-side hair follicle microdissection precisely separates donor follicular tissue from interfollicular tissue and donor cells remain confined to hair follicles. This makes it possible to differentiate migration of hair follicle cells from interfollicular epidermis in lineage tracing wound experiments using genetically labeled donor follicles.
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    Toward a skin-material interface with vacuum-integrated capped macroporous scaffolds
    Stynes, GD ; Kiroff, GK ; Morrison, WA ; Page, RS ; Kirkland, MA (WILEY, 2017-07)
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    Vascular Pedicle and Microchannels: Simple Methods Toward Effective In Vivo Vascularization of 3D Scaffolds
    Rnjak-Kovacina, J ; Gerrand, Y-W ; Wray, LS ; Tan, B ; Joukhdar, H ; Kaplan, DL ; Morrison, WA ; Mitchell, GM (WILEY, 2019-11-12)
    Poor vascularization remains a key limiting factor in translating advances in tissue engineering to clinical applications. Vascular pedicles (large arteries and veins) isolated in plastic chambers are known to sprout an extensive capillary network. This study examined the effect vascular pedicles and scaffold architecture have on vascularization and tissue integration of implanted silk scaffolds. Porous silk scaffolds with or without microchannels are manufactured to support implantation of a central vascular pedicle, without a chamber, implanted in the groin of Sprague Dawley rats, and assessed morphologically and morphometrically at 2 and 6 weeks. At both time points, blood vessels, connective tissue, and an inflammatory response infiltrate all scaffold pores externally, and centrally when a vascular pedicle is implanted. At week 2, vascular pedicles significantly increase the degree of scaffold tissue infiltration, and both the pedicle and the scaffold microchannels significantly increase vascular volume and vascular density. Interestingly, microchannels contribute to increased scaffold vascularity without affecting overall tissue infiltration, suggesting a direct effect of biomaterial architecture on vascularization. The inclusion of pedicles and microchannels are simple and effective proangiogenic techniques for engineering thick tissue constructs as both increase the speed of construct vascularization in the early weeks post in vivo implantation.
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    A novel microsurgical rodent model for the transplantation of engineered cardiac muscle flap
    Tee, R ; Morrison, WA ; Dilley, RJ (WILEY, 2018-07)
    BACKGROUND: The survival of engineered cardiac muscle 'grafts' to the epicardium is limited by vascularization post-transplantation in rat models. In this article, we describe the methodology of a novel rat model that allows for the transplantation of an engineered cardiac muscle flap (ECMF) onto the epicardium. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A total of 40 rats were used. Twenty-four neonatal rats were used to harvest cardiomyocytes. At week 1, ECMF were generated by seeding cardiomyocytes into the arteriovenous loop (AVL) tissue engineering chamber implanted into the right groin of adult rats (n = 8). At week 6, the ECMF were harvested based on a pedicle along the femoral-iliac-abdominal vessel and anastomosed to the neck vessels of the recipient syngeneic adult rats (n = 8). The flaps were delivered into the thoracic cavity and onto the epicardium. The transplanted flaps were harvested at week 10. Survival of the flaps was assessed by the patency of anastomoses and viability of the cardiomyocytes through histological analysis (hematoxylin and eosin [H&E], desmin, and von Willebrand factor [vWF] immunostaining). RESULTS: Six out of 8 rats survived the transplantation procedure. These remaining 6 recipient rats survived until harvest time point at 4 weeks post-transplantation. The mean area of the flap was 46.7mm2 . Six out of 6 flaps harvested at week 10 showed viable cardiomyocytes using desmin immunostaining and vascular channels were seen at the interface between flap and epicardium. CONCLUSION: This is a technically feasible model that will be useful for future assessment of different cardiac stem cell implants and their functional significance in rat heart models.
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    In vivo tissue engineering of an adipose tissue flap using fat grafts and Adipogel
    Debels, H ; Palmer, J ; Han, X-L ; Poon, C ; Abberton, K ; Morrison, W (WILEY, 2020-04)
    For decades, plastic surgeons have spent considerable effort exploring anatomical regions for free flap design. More recently, tissue-engineering approaches have been utilised in an attempt to grow transplantable tissue flaps in vivo. The aim of this study was to engineer a fat flap with a vascular pedicle by combining autologous fat grafts and a novel acellular hydrogel (Adipogel) in an established tissue-engineering model comprising a chamber and blood vessel loop. An arteriovenous loop was created in the rat groin from the femoral vessels and positioned inside a perforated polycarbonate chamber. In Group 1, the chamber contained minced, centrifuged autologous fat; in Group 2, Adipogel was added to the graft; and in Group 3, Adipogel alone was used. Constructs were histologically examined at 6 and 12 weeks. In all groups, new tissue was generated. Adipocytes, although appearing viable in the graft at the time of insertion, were predominantly nonviable at 6 weeks. However, by 12 weeks, new fat had formed in all groups and was significantly greater in the combined fat/Adipogel group. No significant difference was seen in final construct total volume or construct neovascularisation between the groups. This study demonstrated that a pedicled adipose flap can be generated in rats by combining a blood vessel loop, an adipogenic hydrogel, and a lipoaspirate equivalent. Success appears to be based on adipogenesis rather than on adipocyte survival, and consistent with our previous work, this adipogenesis occurred subsequent to graft death and remodelling. The regenerative process was significantly enhanced in the presence of Adipogel.