{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Primary Human Cell-Derived Extracellular Matrix from Decellularized Fibroblast Microtissues with Tissue-Dependent Composition and Microstructure. {Author}: Fonseca VC;Van V;Ip BC; {Journal}: Cell Mol Bioeng {Volume}: 17 {Issue}: 3 {Year}: 2024 Jun {Factor}: 3.337 {DOI}: 10.1007/s12195-024-00809-y {Abstract}: UNASSIGNED: Human extracellular matrix (ECM) exhibits complex protein composition and architecture depending on tissue and disease state, which remains challenging to reverse engineer. One promising approach is based on cell-secreted ECM from primary human fibroblasts that can be decellularized into acellular biomaterials. However, fibroblasts cultured on rigid culture plastic or biomaterial scaffolds can experience aberrant mechanical cues that perturb the biochemical, mechanical, and the efficiency of ECM production.
UNASSIGNED: Here, we demonstrate a method for preparing decellularized ECM using primary human fibroblasts with tissue and disease-specific features with two case studies: (1) cardiac fibroblasts; (2) lung fibroblasts from healthy or diseased donors. Cells aggregate into engineered microtissues in low adhesion microwells that deposited ECM and can be decellularized. We systematically investigate microtissue morphology, matrix architecture, and mechanical properties, along with transcriptomic and proteomic analysis.
UNASSIGNED: Microtissues exhibited tissue-specific gene expression and proteomics profiling, with ECM complexity similar to native tissues. Healthy lung microtissues exhibited web-like fibrillar collagen compared to dense patches in healthy heart microtissues. Diseased lung exhibited more disrupted collagen architecture than healthy. Decellularized microtissues had tissue-specific mechanical stiffness that was physiologically relevant. Importantly, decellularized microtissues supported viability and proliferation of human cells.
UNASSIGNED: We show that engineered microtissues of primary human fibroblasts seeded in low-adhesion microwells can be decellularized to produce human, tissue and disease-specific ECM. This approach should be widely applicable for generating personalized matrix that recapitulate tissues and disease states, relevant for culturing patient cells ex vivo as well as implantation for therapeutic treatments.
UNASSIGNED: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12195-024-00809-y.