Department of Bioengineering, Clemson University, SC 29634, USA.
J Tissue Eng Regen Med. 2013 Jul;7(7):505-14. doi: 10.1002/term.540. Epub 2012 Jul 4.
The current clinical successes of tissue engineering are limited primarily to low-metabolism, acellular, pre-vascularized or thin tissues. Mass transport has been identified as the primary culprit, limiting the delivery of nutrients (such as oxygen and glucose) and removal of wastes, from tissues deep within a cellular scaffold. While strategies to develop sufficient vasculature to overcome hypoxia in vitro are promising, inconsistencies between the in vitro and the in vivo environments may still negate the effectiveness of large-volume tissue-engineered scaffolds. While a common theme in tissue engineering is to maximize oxygen supply, studies suggest that moderate oxygenation of cellular scaffolds during in vitro conditioning is preferable to high oxygen levels. Aiming for moderate oxygen values to prevent hypoxia while still promoting angiogenesis may be obtained by tailoring in vitro culture conditions to the oxygen environment the scaffold will experience upon implantation. This review discusses the causes and effects of tissue-engineering hypoxia and the optimization of oxygenation for the minimization of in vivo hypoxia.
目前组织工程学的临床成功主要局限于低代谢、去细胞、预血管化或薄组织。传质已被确定为主要罪魁祸首,限制了营养物质(如氧气和葡萄糖)的输送和废物的清除,从细胞支架的深层组织。虽然开发足够的血管来克服体外缺氧的策略很有前途,但体外和体内环境之间的不一致性仍可能否定大容量组织工程支架的有效性。虽然组织工程学的一个共同主题是最大限度地提高氧气供应,但研究表明,在体外培养过程中使细胞支架适度氧合优于高氧水平。通过将体外培养条件调整为支架在植入后将经历的氧气环境,可以实现预防缺氧的目的,同时仍促进血管生成。本文综述了组织工程学缺氧的原因和影响,以及优化氧合作用以最小化体内缺氧的问题。