BME PhD Defense: Andre E. Figueroa-Milla: "DEVELOPMENT OF CELL-ONLY VASCULAR TISSUE MODELS USING 3D BIOPRINTING"

Tuesday, April 9, 2024
1:00 pm to 2:00 pm
Floor/Room #
1002
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PhD Dissertation Defense

"DEVELOPMENT OF CELL-ONLY VASCULAR TISSUE MODELS USING 3D BIOPRINTING" 

Andre E. Figueroa-Milla 

Tuesday, April 9, 2024

Gateway Park, Room GP 1002

1:00am-2:20am

Abstract: Coronary artery disease is the leading cause of death in the United States, accounting for 610,000 deaths per year. The development of new drugs to treat coronary artery disease has been limited due to ineffective pre-clinical models, which are used as to predict the success of novel therapeutics in humans. Current pre-clinical models include two-dimensional (2D) cell culture, which does not capture the complex physiology or pathophysiology of human tissues. Animal models offer complex systemic responses but have innate genetic and physiological differences from humans. These limitations lead to less than 14% of drugs succeeding in clinical trials despite yielding promising results in pre-clinical studies. Three-dimensional (3D) engineered tissue models are an alternative to standard pre-clinical models as they can recapitulate native human tissue anatomy, physiology, and pathology. Current functional engineered tissue models of blood vessels have yet to achieve spatial eccentricity, resulting in constructs that fail to capture the complex anatomy of vascular diseases. For example, atherosclerosis, a pathological precursor of coronary artery disease, initiates in a specific region of the vessel, and can progressively occlude the artery. Thus, there is a need to create a human-relevant functional blood vessel model with localized eccentric regions. The work presented in this dissertation describes the first cell-only 3D bioprinted self-assembled engineered vasculature tissue featuring eccentric regions that does not rely in pre-aggregated cellular units. To achieve this, engineered tissues were created from Rat Aortic Smooth Muscle Cells (SMC) which were bioprinted into a methacrylated alginate (OMA) microgel bath and aggregated in a single step. The self-aggregated constructs secrete their own Extra Cellular Matrix (ECM), allowing cell-cell interactions and tissue remodeling. We demonstrated the advantages of dispensing cells with reduced-diameter tips (159 μm) in terms of minimizing cell damage, enhancing tissue morphology, and improving tissue mechanical properties. Subsequently, we developed a workflow for creating high-fidelity constructs containing distinct localized regions with multiple bioinks. Furthermore, we enhanced the functionality of these models by utilizing human cells, specifically investigating the differentiation of human Mesenchymal Stem Cells (hMSCs) into human SMCs through contractile protein expression and contraction studies.

Dissertation Advisor: 

Dr. Marsha Rolle

Professor

BME Department

Worcester Polytechnic Institute

Defense Committee:    

Dr. Jeannine Coburn 

Associate Professor

Biomedical Engineering

Worcester Polytechnic Institute

Catherine Whittington, PhD

Assistant Professor

Biomedical Engineering

Worcester Polytechnic Institute 

Amity Manning, PhD

Associate Professor

Biology and Biotechnology

Worcester Polytechnic Institute

 

Dr. Eben Alsberg

Professor

Biomedical Engineering

University of Illinois at Chicago

   

                                                                                                                            

Audience(s)

DEPARTMENT(S):

Biomedical Engineering
Contact Person
Kate Harrison

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