TEBL collaborates on $1.29M NIH grant

Fischell Department of Bioengineering (BioE) Associate Professor Yu Chen was recently awarded a four-year, $1.29 million National Institutes of Health (NIH) Research Project Grant (R01) for developing a new system capable of non-invasive, three-dimensional imaging of engineered tissue.

Collaborators on this project include Dr. John Caccamese, Jr. (Associate Professor of Oral-Maxillofacial Surgery at the University of Maryland Medical System and University of Maryland Baltimore College of Dental Surgery) and our lab.

Bone tissue engineering scaffolds are used in a wide variety of clinical settings to promote bone repair and regeneration. As such, these scaffolds act as vehicles for the delivery of progenitor cell populations or support structures for surrounding tissue ingrowth. Often, the properties of the scaffold – such as composition, porosity, pore size, and pore interconnectivity – play a determining role in the success of the engineered tissue. To improve tissue regeneration and integration, for instance, engineers must design scaffolds that mimic surrounding tissue morphology, structure, and function, and improve mechanical stability between the implanted engineered tissue and the surrounding native bone.

“Three-dimensional cell-based tissue grafts have been increasingly useful in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine,” Chen said. “A critical building block in tissue engineering is the scaffold, which can act as the supporting medium to deliver cell populations and induce ingrowth of vessels and surrounding tissues. Therefore, it is necessary to develop tools to characterize the architecture of the scaffold.”

Currently, however, there are no non-destructive methods of analyzing engineered tissue structures and stem cell functions beyond the reach of traditional microscopy. This means, researchers have had limited ability to characterize cells located deep inside scaffolds.

In fact, today’s most frequently used tissue scaffold characterization techniques present a number of disadvantages including complex preparation procedures and risks of damaging the tissue scaffold. Most techniques are invasive, discrete methods of analysis, while some are expensive and involve a long data acquisition process.

To combat these challenges, Chen and his fellow researchers are developing a new platform that utilizes optical coherence tomography (OCT) and fluorescence laminar optical tomography (FLOT) for characterization of cell-scaffold interaction. OCT is a non-invasive imaging technique that uses light to capture micrometer-resolution, three-dimensional images of biological tissue, while FLOT is a high-resolution imaging technique that uses fluorescent light to produce images of tissue.

Generally, engineered tissue exists as a combination of living cells and the supporting scaffold. OCT is able to visualize the internal structure of the scaffold in 3D, enabling subsequent image processing to quantitatively investigate characteristics such as pore size, porosity, and inter-connectivity. Meanwhile, FLOT is able to visualize cell viability, proliferation, distribution, and differentiation within the scaffold over time and space.

As such, the combined OCT/FLOT system offers promise that researchers will be able to evaluate both structural and cellular information simultaneously to study cell-scaffold interaction and collect feedback on the design of scaffolds in order to achieve optimal cellular function. This means that the system proposed by Chen’s research team could have a tremendous impact on how engineers construct and evaluate tissue scaffolds, and could pave the way for major advancements in bone tissue engineering.

The team’s efforts demonstrate how multi-disciplinary collaboration can produce revolutionary advancements in engineering. As an Mpowering the State research initiative, Chen and Fisher of the University of Maryland in College Park, Md., are able to work across campuses with University of Maryland Medical System/Baltimore College of Dental Surgery’s Caccamese, who contributes clinical expertise to the project.

More information about the Mpowering the State initiative is available online.

Article originally from: Fischell Department of Bioengineering.

Nguyen Wins Outstanding Graduate Student Award

Congratulations to Bao for winning the Outstanding Graduate Student Award from the Fischell Department of Bioengineering! This award comes for Bao’s work related to growing larger bone constructs and vascularization of tissue engineered bone. Congratulations Bao!

TEBL awarded MSCRF grant

The Maryland Stem Cell Research Commission has funded 29 new proposals for the 2015 fiscal year. Among those, our lab was awarded a grant for the proposal titled “Expansion of HSCs In a 3D Printed Bioreactor Containing MSCs as a Hematopoietic Microenvironment”. This project seeks to use bioreactor technology to enhance the expansion and growth of both mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs, which form bone, cartilage, muscle, and other cell types that nurture HSCs in bone marrow) and hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs, which form blood cells) while maintaining their ability to self-renew. The underlying idea is that we can recapitulate some of the key physical cues of the native stem cell niche, and that recapitulating this microenvironment will enhance the expansion of MSCs and HSCs with self-renewal capacity. Ultimately, this could enable researchers to grow larger number of cells than they would via traditional methods, allowing more investigative work into understanding these stem cells and their utilization for regenerative medicine applications.

For more information, visit the Maryland Stem Cell Research Fund’s website.

Bracaglia Wins Outstanding Student Award from TERMIS-AM Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. 2014

 Laurie Bracaglia has been awarded the 2014 Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. Outstanding Student Award by the Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine International Society – Americas Chapter (TERMIS-AM)., the leading society in the field of tissue engineering.

Bracaglia will be presented with an honorarium and plaque recognizing her outstanding achievement within the tissue engineering and regenerative medicine field at the TERMIS-AM conference in Washington, DC, to be held in December 2014. In addition, her award-winning manuscript will be published in the journal, Tissue Engineering Part A.

 

Bracaglia and Melchiorri Awarded AHA Predoctoral Fellowships

Awarded by the American Heart Association, the fellowships consists of a $24,000/year award and $1,000/year discretionary funds.  17.5% of predoctoral applicants are awarded the fellowship from a pool of 700 qualified national applications. The AHA’s mission is: “Building healthier lives, free of cardiovascular diseases and stroke. Our mission drives everything we do.” Applicants are judged based on how well their research might achieve that goal.