マツウラ カツヒサ   Matsuura Katsuhisa
  松浦 勝久
   所属   医学部 医学科
   職種   教授・基幹分野長
論文種別 原著
言語種別 英語
査読の有無 査読あり
表題 A novel method to align cells in a cardiac tissue-like construct fabricated by cell sheet-based tissue engineering.
掲載誌名 正式名:Journal of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine
略  称:J Tissue Eng Regen Med
ISSNコード:19327005/19326254
掲載区分国外
出版社 Wiley
巻・号・頁 14(7),pp.944-954
著者・共著者 HOMMA Jun†, SHIMIZU Shogo, SEKINE Hidekazu*, MATSUURA Katsuhisa, SHIMIZU Tatsuya
発行年月 2020/06/01
概要 Fabrication of cardiac tissue from human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPS-CMs) has received great interest, but a major challenge facing researchers is the alignment of cardiomyocytes in the same direction to optimize force generation. We have developed a novel method of fabricating a cardiac tissue-like construct with aligned cells based on the unidirectional stretching of a hiPS-CM sheet. A square cell sheet was harvested from a temperature-responsive culture dish and placed on a silicone surface, and an extending force was imposed on the silicone to stretch the cell sheet along one direction. To enable evaluation of cardiomyocyte morphology in vitro, a cell sheet was constructed by co-culture of hiPS-CMs and human adipose-derived stem cells. In separate experiments, a stretched double-layered cell sheet constructed from hiPS-CMs alone was transplanted onto the muscle of an athymic rat, and its features were compared with those of a non-stretched (control) cell sheet. Immediately after stretching, the stretched cell sheet was significantly longer than the control cell sheet. Immunohistological analysis revealed that the cardiomyocytes showed unidirectional alignment in the stretched cell sheet but random directionality in the control cell sheet. Two weeks after transplantation, immunohistology demonstrated that the stretched cell sheet had retained the unidirectionality of its myocardial fibers and had an orientation intensity that was higher than that of the control cell sheet after transplantation or the stretched cell sheet before transplantation. Our technique provides a simple method of aligning a hiPS-CM-derived cardiac tissue-like construct without the use of a scaffold.
DOI 10.1002/term.3074
PMID 32478904