Department of Biological Systems Engineering, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE 68583, USA.
NMR Biomed. 2012 Mar;25(3):452-63. doi: 10.1002/nbm.1663. Epub 2011 Mar 8.
The objective of tissue engineering (TE) is to create functional replacements for various tissues; the mechanical properties of these engineered constructs are critical to their function. Several techniques have been developed for the measurement of the mechanical properties of tissues and organs; however, current methods are destructive. The field of TE will benefit immensely if biomechanical models developed by these techniques could be combined with existing imaging modalities to enable noninvasive, dynamic assessment of mechanical properties during tissue growth. Specifically, MR elastography (MRE), which is based on the synchronization of a mechanical actuator with a phase contrast imaging pulse sequence, has the capacity to measure tissue strain generated by sonic cyclic displacement. The captured displacement is presented in shear wave images from which the complex shear moduli can be extracted or simplified by a direct measure, termed the shear stiffness. MRE has been extended to the microscopic scale, combining clinical MRE with high-field magnets, stronger magnetic field gradients and smaller, more sensitive, radiofrequency coils, enabling the interrogation of smaller samples, such as tissue-engineered constructs. The following topics are presented in this article: (i) current mechanical measurement techniques and their limitations in TE; (ii) a description of the MRE system, MRE theory and how it can be applied for the measurement of mechanical properties of tissue-engineered constructs; (iii) a summary of in vitro MRE work for the monitoring of osteogenic and adipogenic tissues originating from human adult mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs); (iv) preliminary in vivo studies of MRE of tissues originating from mouse MSCs implanted subcutaneously in immunodeficient mice with an emphasis on in vivo MRE challenges; (v) future directions to resolve current issues with in vivo MRE in the context of how to improve the future role of MRE in TE.
组织工程(TE)的目标是创建各种组织的功能性替代品;这些工程构建体的机械性能对其功能至关重要。已经开发了几种技术来测量组织和器官的机械性能;然而,目前的方法是破坏性的。如果这些技术开发的生物力学模型能够与现有的成像方式相结合,从而能够在组织生长过程中进行非侵入性、动态的机械性能评估,那么 TE 领域将受益匪浅。具体来说,基于机械致动器与相位对比成像脉冲序列同步的磁共振弹性成像(MRE)具有测量由声循环位移产生的组织应变的能力。捕获的位移以剪切波图像呈现,从中可以提取出复杂的剪切模量,或者通过直接测量简化为剪切刚度。MRE 已扩展到微观尺度,将临床 MRE 与高磁场磁体、更强的磁场梯度和更小、更灵敏的射频线圈相结合,能够对较小的样本进行询问,例如组织工程构建体。本文介绍了以下主题:(i)当前 TE 中的机械测量技术及其局限性;(ii)MRE 系统的描述、MRE 理论以及如何将其应用于组织工程构建体机械性能的测量;(iii)体外 MRE 监测人类成体间充质干细胞(MSCs)来源成骨和脂肪组织的工作综述;(iv)皮下植入免疫缺陷小鼠的小鼠 MSC 来源组织的初步体内 MRE 研究,重点介绍体内 MRE 挑战;(v)在如何提高 MRE 在 TE 中的未来作用的背景下,解决当前体内 MRE 问题的未来方向。