Saturday, November 05, 2011

Novel 'cell wires' to patch up heart or nerve damage

Noodle-like strings containing living cells have been made by researchers in the US. Simple to make, these 'cell wires' are a step towards exciting medical treatments, such as helping to repair tissue in the heart and spinal cord, or the design of artificial muscles.

Nano noodle
When brought into contact with salty water, the peptide mix solidifies into a noodle-like gel

© Nature Materials
'We have discovered a way to align huge arrays of nano-sized filaments and living cells over macroscopic distances, says Sam Stupp, who led the research at Northwestern University, Illinois. 'The arrays form a noodle-shaped gel that could potentially be implanted where cell alignment is important, such as in cardiac or nervous tissue.'

To make the strings, Stupp's team took a solution of amphiphilic peptides that are known to self-assemble into bundles of nanofibres. The solution was heated to generate a liquid crystal, then squeezed through a pipette into salty water containing either sodium chloride (NaCl) or calcium chloride (CaCl2).

'When the liquid crystal is drawn by hand over the salty medium, all the domains align in the same direction and calcium ions freeze the alignment in noodle-like gel,' Stupp explains. The resulting strings are non-toxic, can be

knotted or rolled up, and are available in a range of thicknesses by varying the diameter of the pipette.

Living cell filling

Next, the team integrated stem cells into the peptide solution, which were able to survive the synthesis and become trapped in the structure. Once inside, the cells were observed to proliferate inside the structure and grow in uniform directions.

To demonstrate the potential of the process, the team produced filaments containing cardiomyocytes: heart muscle cells that spontaneously generate electrical signals. Around 10 days after the strings had been produced, the cells had grown to fill the structure and electrical signals could be seen travelling up the full length of the string.

'This work represents an important step forward in creating artificial muscles,' says Hongbin Li, who has recently designed artificial proteins that mimic muscle tissue at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. 'It also represents a new tissue engineering scaffold that may help to repair muscle or nerve damage in patients,' he adds.

'This is an innovative and exciting approach,' agrees Nenad Bursac, an expert in cardiac tissue engineering at Duke University, US. However, there are still big challenges to overcome before this technology reaches the clinic, he adds.

'In terms of regenerative medicine, we still need to find ways to better control how stem cells develop into tissue,' Bursac told Chemistry World. 'And for applications such as heart surgery, we need to find ways to produce thick muscle tissue and integrate it smoothly with the rest of the heart.'

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