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      Engineering small-caliber vascular grafts from collagen filaments and nanofibers with comparable mechanical properties to native vessels

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          Abstract

          At the present time, there is no successful synthetic, off-the-shelf small-caliber vascular graft (<6 mm) for the repair or bypass of the coronary or carotid arteries. This stimulates on-going investigations to fabricate an artificial vascular graft that has both sufficient mechanical properties as well as superior biological performance. Collagen has long been considered as a viable material to encourage cell recruitment, tissue regeneration, and revascularization, but its use has been limited by its inferior mechanical properties. In this study, novel electrochemically aligned collagen filaments were used to engineer a bilayer small-caliber vascular graft, by circular knitting the collagen filaments and electrospinning collagen nanofibers. The collagen prototype grafts showed significantly greater bursting strength under dry and hydrated conditions to that of autografts such as the human internal mammary artery and the saphenous vein (SV). The suture retention strength was sufficient under dry condition, but that under hydrated condition needs to be further improved. The radial dynamic compliance of the collagen grafts was similar to that of the human SV. During in vitro cell culture assays with human umbilical vein endothelial cells, the prototype collagen grafts also encouraged cell adhesion and promoted cell proliferation compared to the synthetic poly(lactic acid) grafts. In conclusion, this study demonstrated the feasibility of the use of novel collagen filaments for fabricating small caliber tissue-engineered vascular grafts that provide both sufficient mechanical properties and superior biological performance.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          101521964
          37838
          Biofabrication
          Biofabrication
          Biofabrication
          1758-5082
          1758-5090
          13 June 2020
          17 May 2019
          17 May 2019
          29 June 2020
          : 11
          : 3
          : 035020
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Wilson College of Textiles, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, United States of America
          [2 ]Dept. of Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, United States of America
          [3 ]Joint Dept. of Biomedical Engineering, UNC-Chapel Hill & NCState University, Raleigh, United States of America
          [4 ]College of Textiles, Donghua University, Shanghai, People’s Republic of China
          Author notes
          Author information
          http://orcid.org/0000-0001-6754-7500
          Article
          PMC7322577 PMC7322577 7322577 nihpa1603706
          10.1088/1758-5090/ab15ce
          7322577
          30943452
          37dbdb53-e681-461f-bfbc-5cba37f3912f
          History
          Categories
          Article

          electrochemically aligned collagen (ELAC) filament,small caliber vascular graft,endothelialization,knitting,electrospinning,collagen nanofibers,mechanical properties

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