Abstract
Decellularized adipose tissue (DAT) scaffolds represent a promising cell-instructive platform for soft tissue engineering. While recent work has highlighted that mesenchymal stromal cells, including adipose-derived stromal cells (ASCs), can be combined with decellularized scaffolds to augment tissue regeneration, the mechanisms involved require further study. The objective of this work was to probe the roles of syngeneic donor ASCs and host-derived macrophages in tissue remodeling of DAT scaffolds within an immunocompetent mouse model. Dual transgenic reporter mouse strains were employed to track and characterize the donor ASCs and host macrophages within the DAT implants. More specifically, ASCs isolated from dsRed mice were seeded on DAT scaffolds, and the seeded and unseeded control scaffolds were implanted subcutaneously into MacGreen transgenic mice for up to 8 weeks. ASC seeding was shown to augment cell infiltration into the DAT implants at 8 weeks, and this was linked to significantly enhanced angiogenesis relative to the unseeded controls. Immunohistochemical staining demonstrated long-term retention of the syngeneic donor ASCs over the duration of the 8-week study, providing evidence that the DAT scaffolds are a cell-supportive delivery platform. Notably, newly formed adipocytes within the DAT implants were not dsRed+, indicating that the donor ASCs supported fat formation through indirect mechanisms. Immunohistochemical tracking of host macrophages through costaining for enhanced green fluorescent protein with the macrophage marker Iba1 revealed that ASC seeding significantly increased the number of infiltrating macrophages within the DAT implants at 3 weeks, while the fraction of macrophages relative to the total cellular infiltrate was similar between the groups at 1, 3, and 8 weeks. Consistent with the tissue remodeling response that was observed, western blotting demonstrated that there was significantly augmented expression of CD163 and CD206, markers of constructive M2-like macrophages, within the ASC-seeded DAT implants. Overall, our results demonstrate that exogenous ASCs enhance tissue regeneration within DAT scaffolds indirectly through multimodal mechanisms that include host cell recruitment and immunomodulation. These data provide further evidence to support the use of decellularized scaffolds as a delivery platform for ASCs in tissue engineering.
Impact statement
Decellularized tissues have been investigated as proregenerative scaffolds in tissue engineering. This study corroborates evidence demonstrating improved tissue remodeling and regeneration in scaffolds preseeded with adipose-derived stromal cells (ASCs). Importantly, this work investigated ASC-mediated mechanisms of tissue regeneration in decellularized adipose tissue (DAT) scaffolds, and showed that differences in the macrophage response contributed to enhanced tissue remodeling in the ASC-seeded DAT scaffolds relative to unseeded controls. The donor ASCs indirectly promoted tissue regeneration through multimodal mechanisms that include cell recruitment and immunomodulation. The results provide important mechanistic and preclinical data to support the continued development of this strategy for soft tissue augmentation and reconstructive procedures.
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