Indirect Low-Intensity Ultrasonic Stimulation for Tissue Engineering

Low-intensity ultrasound (LIUS) treatment has been shown to increase mass transport, which could benefit tissue grafts during the immediate postimplant period, when blood supply to the implanted tissue is suboptimal. In this in vitro study, we investigated effects...

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Main Authors: Hyoungshin Park, Michael C. Yip, Beata Chertok, Joseph Kost, James B. Kobler, Robert Langer, Steven M. Zeitels
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2010-01-01
Series:Journal of Tissue Engineering
Online Access:http://tej.sagepub.com/content/1/1/10.4061_2010/973530.full.pdf
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spelling doaj-03a6ccffa7a345efb42a0e6f0dbc555e2020-11-25T03:21:26ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Tissue Engineering2041-73142010-01-011110.4061/2010/97353010.4061_2010/973530Indirect Low-Intensity Ultrasonic Stimulation for Tissue EngineeringHyoungshin ParkMichael C. YipBeata ChertokJoseph KostJames B. KoblerRobert LangerSteven M. ZeitelsLow-intensity ultrasound (LIUS) treatment has been shown to increase mass transport, which could benefit tissue grafts during the immediate postimplant period, when blood supply to the implanted tissue is suboptimal. In this in vitro study, we investigated effects of LIUS stimulation on dye diffusion, proliferation, metabolism, and tropomyosin expression of muscle cells (C2C12) and on tissue viability and gene expression of human adipose tissue organoids. We found that LIUS increased dye diffusion within adjacent tissue culture wells and caused anisotropic diffusion patterns. This effect was confirmed by a hydrophone measurement resulting in acoustic pressure 150–341 Pa in wells. Cellular studies showed that LIUS significantly increased proliferation, metabolic activity, and expression of tropomyosin. Adipose tissue treated with LIUS showed significantly increased metabolic activity and the cells had similar morphology to normal unilocular adipocytes. Gene analysis showed that tumor necrosis factor-alpha expression (a marker for tissue damage) was significantly lower for stimulated organoids than for control groups. Our data suggests that LIUS could be a useful modality for improving graft survival in vivo.http://tej.sagepub.com/content/1/1/10.4061_2010/973530.full.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hyoungshin Park
Michael C. Yip
Beata Chertok
Joseph Kost
James B. Kobler
Robert Langer
Steven M. Zeitels
spellingShingle Hyoungshin Park
Michael C. Yip
Beata Chertok
Joseph Kost
James B. Kobler
Robert Langer
Steven M. Zeitels
Indirect Low-Intensity Ultrasonic Stimulation for Tissue Engineering
Journal of Tissue Engineering
author_facet Hyoungshin Park
Michael C. Yip
Beata Chertok
Joseph Kost
James B. Kobler
Robert Langer
Steven M. Zeitels
author_sort Hyoungshin Park
title Indirect Low-Intensity Ultrasonic Stimulation for Tissue Engineering
title_short Indirect Low-Intensity Ultrasonic Stimulation for Tissue Engineering
title_full Indirect Low-Intensity Ultrasonic Stimulation for Tissue Engineering
title_fullStr Indirect Low-Intensity Ultrasonic Stimulation for Tissue Engineering
title_full_unstemmed Indirect Low-Intensity Ultrasonic Stimulation for Tissue Engineering
title_sort indirect low-intensity ultrasonic stimulation for tissue engineering
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Journal of Tissue Engineering
issn 2041-7314
publishDate 2010-01-01
description Low-intensity ultrasound (LIUS) treatment has been shown to increase mass transport, which could benefit tissue grafts during the immediate postimplant period, when blood supply to the implanted tissue is suboptimal. In this in vitro study, we investigated effects of LIUS stimulation on dye diffusion, proliferation, metabolism, and tropomyosin expression of muscle cells (C2C12) and on tissue viability and gene expression of human adipose tissue organoids. We found that LIUS increased dye diffusion within adjacent tissue culture wells and caused anisotropic diffusion patterns. This effect was confirmed by a hydrophone measurement resulting in acoustic pressure 150–341 Pa in wells. Cellular studies showed that LIUS significantly increased proliferation, metabolic activity, and expression of tropomyosin. Adipose tissue treated with LIUS showed significantly increased metabolic activity and the cells had similar morphology to normal unilocular adipocytes. Gene analysis showed that tumor necrosis factor-alpha expression (a marker for tissue damage) was significantly lower for stimulated organoids than for control groups. Our data suggests that LIUS could be a useful modality for improving graft survival in vivo.
url http://tej.sagepub.com/content/1/1/10.4061_2010/973530.full.pdf
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