Optimisation of amniotic membrane (AM) denuding for tissue engineering

2008 
Purpose Amniotic Membrane (AM) has gained increasing popularity as a useful carrier for ex-vivo expanded cells for tissue engineering, particularly in ocular surface reconstruction. However, current methods employed for denuding AM are highly variable and the consequent effects on the structural and molecular composition of the AM basement membrane (BM) are ambiguous. We compare the effects of the main denuding procedures, and propose a highly effective standardised alternative. Methods AMs preserved for transplantation were denuded using published EDTA and Dispase-based methodologies and our novel thermolysin-based procedure. Scanning and Transmission electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry, for BM components (Collgens IV, and VII, laminin 5, and inegrins α6 and -β4) were used to assess effectiveness of denuding epithelium, whilst maintaining the integrity of the BM. Results EDTA and Dispase-based denuding techniques resulted in the disaggregation and even destruction of the BM structure and molecular composition. Employing thermolysin effectively denuded epithelium whilst maintaining BM structural and molecular integrity. Conclusion Current procedures for preparing AM are variable and often ineffective, resulting in non standard membranes. Our novel thermolysin-based technique effectively denudes the AM whilst preserving an essentially intact and consistent BM. Therefore, we propose this novel thermolysin procedure may potentially improve overall generation of tissue engineered constructs using AM.
    • Correction
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    2
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []