Biomimetic Fibrinogen Nanofiber Scaffolds for Vascular Hematopoietic Stem Cell Niche Engineering.
Veröffentlichungsdatum
2025-10
Autoren
Meermeyer, Sophia Lena
von Kaisenberg, Constantin
Lee-Thedieck, Cornelia
Zusammenfassung
Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) can reconstitute the human blood system. In vivo, HSCs are localized in and regulated by distinct bone marrow (BM) microenvironments, or niches, like the vascular HSC niches near fenestrated sinusoidal blood vessels. These delicate structures, comprising a single-layered endothelium and a discontinuous basement membrane, pose challenges in soft tissue engineering. In this study, the basement membrane in vascular niches is mimicked using nanofibrous fibrinogen scaffolds. A novel clamping system enables handling the scaffold as a membrane and seeding both sides-one with microvascular endothelial cells (HMEC-1) and the other with mesenchymal stem and stroma cells (iMSC#3). Subsequently, HSCs and their progenitors (HSPCs) are introduced from both sides to emulate their niche dynamics (residency, exit, and homing). The study reveals that the fibrinogen scaffolds are highly cytocompatible and show good cell-adhesive properties. In addition, HSPCs are able to migrate through the scaffolds, validating them as fenestrated basement membrane mimetics. This in vitro model offers insights into HSPC behavior in the vascular niche and can serve as a drug testing platform in future studies. Moreover, beyond HSCs, the presented scaffold-based mimetic of the basement membrane offers new opportunities for mimicking and studying vasculature in tissue engineering approaches.
Schlagwörter
basement membrane mimetic
;
endothelial cells
;
hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells
;
in vitro model
;
mesenchymal stem and stroma cells
;
nanofibrous fibrinogen scaffolds
;
vascular stem cell niche
Verlag
Wiley-VCH
Institution
Dokumenttyp
Wissenschaftlicher Artikel
Zeitschrift/Sammelwerk
Advanced Healthcare Materials
ISSN
2192-2659
Sprache
Englisch
