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Micro- and Nano-Mediated Cardiac Tissue Engineering
V. Chan, P. Bajaj, L.Y. Wong, H.J. Kong, T. Saif, B. Cunningham, L. Schook, R. Bashir
Department of Bioengineering, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Division of Biomedical Sciences, Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory
The regeneration of cells and tissue after injury or trauma is critical to medical and civilian communities.
Cardiac injuries and regenerative engineering poses specific challenges since cardiac myocytes, the primary cells
responsible for the mechanical beating of the heart muscle, do not regenerate. The cardiac system poses a
significantly challenging problem in tissue engineering due to the complex 3-dimensional mechano-actuation
properties of the cardiac cells. A grand challenge in cardiology since early 50s is the development of an
artificial heart that can replace a failing heart. Until today, artificial heart is used only for the temporary
use (hrs) until a healthy donor heart is found. The latter is difficult to get, and is often rejected by the
body after successful replacement. This very limited success in heart replacement, in spite of considerable
effort and resources invested so far, calls for a new paradigm in the approach of heart replacement. This
project attempts to offer such a paradigm by proposing to “grow” the heart or its components from the basic
building blocks, namely the cells (differentiated cardiomyocytes) of the patient, biomaterials design, namely
the hydrogels scaffolds to house the cells, and nanotechnology, namely the stereo-lithographically-patterned 3D
substrate. New knowledge on cells’ response to mechanical cues, and recent findings on cardiomyocyte
functionality on mechanically tuned substrates from our labs form the basis for the project. In summary, stem
cell differentiation in scaffolds, novel 3-D fabrication technologies, use of the appropriate bio-materials,
integration of peptides for cardiac cell attachment and cell growth, the characterization of the scaffold
materials and the transmembrane proteins, and cardiac cell mechanics are all critical elements of a comprehensive
design approach proposed in this project for 3-D cardiac tissue engineering.
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