Lung bioengineering: physical stimuli and stem/progenitor cell biology interplay towards biofabricating a functional organ

Publication date

2017-06-29T15:26:54Z

2017-06-29T15:26:54Z

2016-11-01

2017-06-29T15:26:54Z

Abstract

A current approach to obtain bioengineered lungs as a future alternative for transplantation is based on seeding stem cells on decellularized lung scaffolds. A fundamental question to be solved in this approach is how to drive stem cell differentiation onto the different lung cell phenotypes. Whereas the use of soluble factors as agents to modulate the fate of stem cells was established from an early stage of the research with this type of cells, it took longer to recognize that the physical microenvironment locally sensed by stem cells (e.g. substrate stiffness, 3D architecture, cyclic stretch, shear stress, air-liquid interface, oxygenation gradient) also contributes to their differentiation. The potential role played by physical stimuli would be particularly relevant in lung bioengineering since cells within the organ are physiologically subjected to two main stimuli required to facilitate efficient gas exchange: air ventilation and blood perfusion across the organ. The present review focuses on describing how the cell mechanical microenvironment can modulate stem cell differentiation and how these stimuli could be incorporated into lung bioreactors for optimizing organ bioengineering.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

BioMed Central

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Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12931-016-0477-6

Respiratory Research, 2016, vol. 17, p. 161

https://doi.org/10.1186/s12931-016-0477-6

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Rights

cc-by (c) Nonaka, Paula Noemi et al., 2016

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es

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