Acellular scaffolds obtained via decellularization are a key instrument in regenerative medicine both per se and to drive the development of future-generation synthetic scaffolds that could become available off-the-shelf. In this framework, imaging is key to the understanding of the scaffolds' internal structure as well as their interaction with cells and other organs, including ideally post-implantation. Scaffolds of a wide range of intricate organs (esophagus, lung, liver and small intestine) were imaged with x-ray phase contrast computed tomography (PC-CT). Image quality was sufficiently high to visualize scaffold microarchitecture and to detect major anatomical features, such as the esophageal mucosal-submucosal separation, pulmonary alveoli and intestinal villi. These results are a long-sought step for the field of regenerative medicine; until now, histology and scanning electron microscopy have been the gold standard to study the scaffold structure. However, they are both destructive: hence, they are not suitable for imaging scaffolds prior to transplantation, and have no prospect for post-transplantation use. PC-CT, on the other hand, is non-destructive, 3D and fully quantitative. Importantly, not only do we demonstrate achievement of high image quality at two different synchrotron facilities, but also with commercial x-ray equipment, which makes the method available to any research laboratory.

Hagen Charlotte, K., Maghsoudlou, P., Totonelli, G., Diemoz Paul, C., Endrizzi, M., Rigon, L., et al. (2015). High contrast microstructural visualization of natural acellular matrices by means of phase-based x-ray tomography. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 5 [10.1038/srep18156].

High contrast microstructural visualization of natural acellular matrices by means of phase-based x-ray tomography

Bravin A
Membro del Collaboration Group
;
2015

Abstract

Acellular scaffolds obtained via decellularization are a key instrument in regenerative medicine both per se and to drive the development of future-generation synthetic scaffolds that could become available off-the-shelf. In this framework, imaging is key to the understanding of the scaffolds' internal structure as well as their interaction with cells and other organs, including ideally post-implantation. Scaffolds of a wide range of intricate organs (esophagus, lung, liver and small intestine) were imaged with x-ray phase contrast computed tomography (PC-CT). Image quality was sufficiently high to visualize scaffold microarchitecture and to detect major anatomical features, such as the esophageal mucosal-submucosal separation, pulmonary alveoli and intestinal villi. These results are a long-sought step for the field of regenerative medicine; until now, histology and scanning electron microscopy have been the gold standard to study the scaffold structure. However, they are both destructive: hence, they are not suitable for imaging scaffolds prior to transplantation, and have no prospect for post-transplantation use. PC-CT, on the other hand, is non-destructive, 3D and fully quantitative. Importantly, not only do we demonstrate achievement of high image quality at two different synchrotron facilities, but also with commercial x-ray equipment, which makes the method available to any research laboratory.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
natural acellular matrices, phase-based x-ray tomography
English
2015
5
18156
open
Hagen Charlotte, K., Maghsoudlou, P., Totonelli, G., Diemoz Paul, C., Endrizzi, M., Rigon, L., et al. (2015). High contrast microstructural visualization of natural acellular matrices by means of phase-based x-ray tomography. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 5 [10.1038/srep18156].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/343130
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