Effects of Macro-/Micro-Channels on Vascularization and Immune Response of Tissue Engineering Scaffolds

Although the use of porous scaffolds in tissue engineering has been relatively successful, there are still many limitations that need to be addressed, such as low vascularization, low oxygen and nutrient levels, and immune-induced inflammation. As a result, the current porous scaffolds are insuffici...

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Main Authors: Nolan Wen, Enze Qian, Yunqing Kang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-06-01
Series:Cells
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4409/10/6/1514
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spelling doaj-d887ae5b22f347bb91c4751f7df110af2021-07-01T00:17:37ZengMDPI AGCells2073-44092021-06-01101514151410.3390/cells10061514Effects of Macro-/Micro-Channels on Vascularization and Immune Response of Tissue Engineering ScaffoldsNolan Wen0Enze Qian1Yunqing Kang2Palm Beach County Campus, American Heritage Schools, Delray Beach, FL 33484, USADepartment of Ocean & Mechanical Engineering, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL 33431, USADepartment of Ocean & Mechanical Engineering, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL 33431, USAAlthough the use of porous scaffolds in tissue engineering has been relatively successful, there are still many limitations that need to be addressed, such as low vascularization, low oxygen and nutrient levels, and immune-induced inflammation. As a result, the current porous scaffolds are insufficient when treating large defects. This paper analyzed scientific research pertaining to the effects of macro-/micro-channels on the cell recruitment, vascularization, and immune response of tissue engineering scaffolds. Most of the studies contained either cell culturing experimentation or experimentation on small animals such as rats and mice. The sacrificial template method, template casting method, and 3D printing method were the most common methods in the fabrication of channeled scaffolds. Some studies combine the sacrificial and 3D printing methods to design and create their scaffold with channels. The overall results from these studies showed that the incorporation of channels within scaffolds greatly increased vascularization, reduced immune response, and was much more beneficial for cell and growth factor recruitment compared with control groups that contained no channels. More research on the effect of micro-/macro-channels on vascularization or immune response in animal models is necessary in the future in order to achieve clinical translation.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4409/10/6/1514microchannelporous scaffoldtissue engineeringimmune response
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nolan Wen
Enze Qian
Yunqing Kang
spellingShingle Nolan Wen
Enze Qian
Yunqing Kang
Effects of Macro-/Micro-Channels on Vascularization and Immune Response of Tissue Engineering Scaffolds
Cells
microchannel
porous scaffold
tissue engineering
immune response
author_facet Nolan Wen
Enze Qian
Yunqing Kang
author_sort Nolan Wen
title Effects of Macro-/Micro-Channels on Vascularization and Immune Response of Tissue Engineering Scaffolds
title_short Effects of Macro-/Micro-Channels on Vascularization and Immune Response of Tissue Engineering Scaffolds
title_full Effects of Macro-/Micro-Channels on Vascularization and Immune Response of Tissue Engineering Scaffolds
title_fullStr Effects of Macro-/Micro-Channels on Vascularization and Immune Response of Tissue Engineering Scaffolds
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Macro-/Micro-Channels on Vascularization and Immune Response of Tissue Engineering Scaffolds
title_sort effects of macro-/micro-channels on vascularization and immune response of tissue engineering scaffolds
publisher MDPI AG
series Cells
issn 2073-4409
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Although the use of porous scaffolds in tissue engineering has been relatively successful, there are still many limitations that need to be addressed, such as low vascularization, low oxygen and nutrient levels, and immune-induced inflammation. As a result, the current porous scaffolds are insufficient when treating large defects. This paper analyzed scientific research pertaining to the effects of macro-/micro-channels on the cell recruitment, vascularization, and immune response of tissue engineering scaffolds. Most of the studies contained either cell culturing experimentation or experimentation on small animals such as rats and mice. The sacrificial template method, template casting method, and 3D printing method were the most common methods in the fabrication of channeled scaffolds. Some studies combine the sacrificial and 3D printing methods to design and create their scaffold with channels. The overall results from these studies showed that the incorporation of channels within scaffolds greatly increased vascularization, reduced immune response, and was much more beneficial for cell and growth factor recruitment compared with control groups that contained no channels. More research on the effect of micro-/macro-channels on vascularization or immune response in animal models is necessary in the future in order to achieve clinical translation.
topic microchannel
porous scaffold
tissue engineering
immune response
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4409/10/6/1514
work_keys_str_mv AT nolanwen effectsofmacromicrochannelsonvascularizationandimmuneresponseoftissueengineeringscaffolds
AT enzeqian effectsofmacromicrochannelsonvascularizationandimmuneresponseoftissueengineeringscaffolds
AT yunqingkang effectsofmacromicrochannelsonvascularizationandimmuneresponseoftissueengineeringscaffolds
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