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Dive into the research topics where Elena M. De-Juan-Pardo is active.

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Featured researches published by Elena M. De-Juan-Pardo.


Vascular Cell | 2014

In vitro pre-vascularisation of tissue-engineered constructs A co-culture perspective

Jeremy G. Baldwin; Mélanie Antille; Ulrich H. Bonda; Elena M. De-Juan-Pardo; Kiarash Khosrotehrani; Saso Ivanovski; Eugen Bogdan Petcu; Dietmar W. Hutmacher

In vitro pre-vascularization is one of the main vascularization strategies in the tissue engineering field. Culturing cells within a tissue-engineered construct (TEC) prior to implantation provides researchers with a greater degree of control over the fate of the cells. However, balancing the diverse range of different cell culture parameters in vitro is seldom easy and in most cases, especially in highly vascularized tissues, more than one cell type will reside within the cell culture system. Culturing multiple cell types in the same construct presents its own unique challenges and pitfalls. The following review examines endothelial-driven vascularization and evaluates the direct and indirect role other cell types have in vessel and capillary formation. The article then analyses the different parameters researchers can modulate in a co-culture system in order to design optimal tissue-engineered constructs to match desired clinical applications.


Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews | 2014

In vitro modeling of the prostate cancer microenvironment

Stuart John Ellem; Elena M. De-Juan-Pardo; Gail P. Risbridger

Prostate cancer is the most commonly diagnosed malignancy in men and advanced disease is incurable. Model systems are a fundamental tool for research and many in vitro models of prostate cancer use cancer cell lines in monoculture. Although these have yielded significant insight they are inherently limited by virtue of their two-dimensional (2D) growth and inability to include the influence of tumour microenvironment. These major limitations can be overcome with the development of newer systems that more faithfully recreate and mimic the complex in vivo multi-cellular, three-dimensional (3D) microenvironment. This article presents the current state of in vitro models for prostate cancer, with particular emphasis on 3D systems and the challenges that remain before their potential to advance our understanding of prostate disease and aid in the development and testing of new therapeutic agents can be realised.


Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2015

Convergence of regenerative medicine and synthetic biology to develop standardized and validated models of human diseases with clinical relevance.

Dietmar W. Hutmacher; Boris Michael Holzapfel; Elena M. De-Juan-Pardo; Brooke Anne Pereira; Stuart John Ellem; Daniela Loessner; Gail P. Risbridger

In order to progress beyond currently available medical devices and implants, the concept of tissue engineering has moved into the centre of biomedical research worldwide. The aim of this approach is not to replace damaged tissue with an implant or device but rather to prompt the patients own tissue to enact a regenerative response by using a tissue-engineered construct to assemble new functional and healthy tissue. More recently, it has been suggested that the combination of Synthetic Biology and translational tissue-engineering techniques could enhance the field of personalized medicine, not only from a regenerative medicine perspective, but also to provide frontier technologies for building and transforming the research landscape in the field of in vitro and in vivo disease models.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

An Integrated Design, Material, and Fabrication Platform for Engineering Biomechanically and Biologically Functional Soft Tissues

Onur Bas; Davide D’Angella; Jeremy G. Baldwin; Nathan J. Castro; Felix M. Wunner; Navid T. Saidy; S. Kollmannsberger; A. Reali; E. Rank; Elena M. De-Juan-Pardo; Dietmar W. Hutmacher

We present a design rationale for stretchable soft network composites for engineering tissues that predominantly function under high tensile loads. The convergence of 3D-printed fibers selected from a design library and biodegradable interpenetrating polymer networks (IPNs) result in biomimetic tissue engineered constructs (bTECs) with fully tunable properties that can match specific tissue requirements. We present our technology platform using an exemplary soft network composite model that is characterized to be flexible, yet ∼125 times stronger (E = 3.19 MPa) and ∼100 times tougher (WExt = ∼2000 kJ m-3) than its hydrogel counterpart.


Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews | 2016

Polylactides in additive biomanufacturing.

Patrina S.P. Poh; Mohit P. Chhaya; Felix M. Wunner; Elena M. De-Juan-Pardo; Arndt F. Schilling; Jan-Thorsten Schantz; Martijn van Griensven; Dietmar W. Hutmacher

New advanced manufacturing technologies under the alias of additive biomanufacturing allow the design and fabrication of a range of products from pre-operative models, cutting guides and medical devices to scaffolds. The process of printing in 3 dimensions of cells, extracellular matrix (ECM) and biomaterials (bioinks, powders, etc.) to generate in vitro and/or in vivo tissue analogue structures has been termed bioprinting. To further advance in additive biomanufacturing, there are many aspects that we can learn from the wider additive manufacturing (AM) industry, which have progressed tremendously since its introduction into the manufacturing sector. First, this review gives an overview of additive manufacturing and both industry and academia efforts in addressing specific challenges in the AM technologies to drive toward AM-enabled industrial revolution. After which, considerations of poly(lactides) as a biomaterial in additive biomanufacturing are discussed. Challenges in wider additive biomanufacturing field are discussed in terms of (a) biomaterials; (b) computer-aided design, engineering and manufacturing; (c) AM and additive biomanufacturing printers hardware; and (d) system integration. Finally, the outlook for additive biomanufacturing was discussed.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Free Form Deformation-Based Image Registration Improves Accuracy of Traction Force Microscopy.

Alvaro Jorge-Peñas; Alicia Izquierdo-Álvarez; Rocio Aguilar-Cuenca; Miguel Vicente-Manzanares; J.M. García-Aznar; Hans Van Oosterwyck; Elena M. De-Juan-Pardo; Carlos Ortiz-de-Solorzano; Arrate Muñoz-Barrutia

Traction Force Microscopy (TFM) is a widespread method used to recover cellular tractions from the deformation that they cause in their surrounding substrate. Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) is commonly used to quantify the substrate’s deformations, due to its simplicity and efficiency. However, PIV relies on a block-matching scheme that easily underestimates the deformations. This is especially relevant in the case of large, locally non-uniform deformations as those usually found in the vicinity of a cell’s adhesions to the substrate. To overcome these limitations, we formulate the calculation of the deformation of the substrate in TFM as a non-rigid image registration process that warps the image of the unstressed material to match the image of the stressed one. In particular, we propose to use a B-spline -based Free Form Deformation (FFD) algorithm that uses a connected deformable mesh to model a wide range of flexible deformations caused by cellular tractions. Our FFD approach is validated in 3D fields using synthetic (simulated) data as well as with experimental data obtained using isolated endothelial cells lying on a deformable, polyacrylamide substrate. Our results show that FFD outperforms PIV providing a deformation field that allows a better recovery of the magnitude and orientation of tractions. Together, these results demonstrate the added value of the FFD algorithm for improving the accuracy of traction recovery.


Biomaterials | 2017

3D printed lattices as an activation and expansion platform for T cell therapy

Frances J. Harding; Batjargal Gundsambuu; Elena M. De-Juan-Pardo; Felix M. Wunner; Marie-Luise Wille; Marek Jasieniak; Kristen A.L. Malatesta; Hans J. Griesser; Antonio Simula; Dietmar W. Hutmacher; Nicolas H. Voelcker; Simon C. Barry

One of the most significant hurdles to the affordable, accessible delivery of cell therapy is the cost and difficulty of expanding cells to clinically relevant numbers. Immunotherapy to prevent autoimmune disease, tolerate organ transplants or target cancer critically relies on the expansion of specialized T cell populations. We have designed 3D-printed cell culture lattices with highly organized micron-scale architectures, functionalized via plasma polymerization to bind monoclonal antibodies that trigger cell proliferation. This 3D technology platform facilitate the expansion of therapeutic human T cell subsets, including regulatory, effector, and cytotoxic T cells while maintaining the correct phenotype. Lentiviral gene delivery to T cells is enhanced in the presence of the lattices. Incorporation of the lattice format into existing cell culture vessels such as the G-Rex system is feasible. This cell expansion platform is user-friendly and expedites cell recovery and scale-up, making it ideal for translating T cell therapies from bench to bedside.


Advanced Materials | 2018

Melt Electrospinning Writing of Highly Ordered Large Volume Scaffold Architectures

Felix M. Wunner; Marie-Luise Wille; Thomas G. Noonan; Onur Bas; Paul D. Dalton; Elena M. De-Juan-Pardo; Dietmar W. Hutmacher

The additive manufacturing of highly ordered, micrometer-scale scaffolds is at the forefront of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine research. The fabrication of scaffolds for the regeneration of larger tissue volumes, in particular, remains a major challenge. A technology at the convergence of additive manufacturing and electrospinning-melt electrospinning writing (MEW)-is also limited in thickness/volume due to the accumulation of excess charge from the deposited material repelling and hence, distorting scaffold architectures. The underlying physical principles are studied that constrain MEW of thick, large volume scaffolds. Through computational modeling, numerical values variable working distances are established respectively, which maintain the electrostatic force at a constant level during the printing process. Based on the computational simulations, three voltage profiles are applied to determine the maximum height (exceeding 7 mm) of a highly ordered large volume scaffold. These thick MEW scaffolds have fully interconnected pores and allow cells to migrate and proliferate. To the best of the authors knowledge, this is the first study to report that z-axis adjustment and increasing the voltage during the MEW process allows for the fabrication of high-volume scaffolds with uniform morphologies and fiber diameters.


Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation; Science & Engineering Faculty | 2014

Rational design of artificial cellular niches for tissue engineering

Ana Sancho; J. Aldazabal; Alberto Rainer; Elena M. De-Juan-Pardo

Tissue Engineering is a promising emerging field that studies the intrinsic regenerative potential of the human body and uses it to restore functionality of damaged organs or tissues unable of self-healing due to illness or ageing. In order to achieve regeneration using Tissue Engineering strategies, it is first necessary to study the properties of the native tissue and determine the cause of tissue failure; second, to identify an optimum population of cells capable of restoring its functionality; and third, to design and manufacture a cellular microenvironment in which those specific cells are directed towards the desired cellular functions. The design of the artificial cellular niche has a tremendous importance, because cells will feel and respond to both its biochemical and biophysical properties very differently. In particular, the artificial niche will act as a physical scaffold for the cells, allowing their three-dimensional spatial organization; also, it will provide mechanical stability to the artificial construct; and finally, it will supply biochemical and mechanical cues to control cellular growth, migration, differentiation and synthesis of natural extracellular matrix. During the last decades, many scientists have made great contributions to the field of Tissue Engineering. Even though this research has frequently been accompanied by vast investments during extended periods of time, yet too often these efforts have not been enough to translate the advances into new clinical therapies. More and more scientists in this field are aware of the need of rational experimental designs before carrying out complex, expensive and time-consuming in vitro and in vivo trials. This review highlights the importance of computer modeling and novel biofabrication techniques as critical key players for a rational design of artificial cellular niches in Tissue Engineering.


International Journal of Cancer | 2018

Immune system augmentation via humanization using stem/progenitor cells and bioengineering in a breast cancer model study: Humanized mouse model for cancer study

Abbas Shafiee; Jacqui A. McGovern; Christoph A. Lahr; Christoph Meinert; Davide Moi; Ferdinand Wagner; Marietta Landgraf; Elena M. De-Juan-Pardo; Roberta Mazzieri; Dietmar W. Hutmacher

Despite significant advances, most current in vivo models fail to fully recapitulate the biological processes that occur in humans. Here we aimed to develop an advanced humanized model with features of an organ bone by providing different bone tissue cellular compartments including preosteoblasts, mesenchymal stem/stromal (MSCs), endothelial and hematopoietic cells in an engineered microenvironment. The bone compartment was generated by culturing the human MSCs, umbilical vein endothelial cells with gelatin methacryloyl hydrogels in the center of a melt‐electrospun polycaprolactone tubular scaffolds, which were seeded with human preosteoblasts. The tissue engineered bone (TEB) was subcutaneously implanted into the NSG mice and formed a morphologically and functionally organ bone. Mice were further humanized through the tail vein injection of human cord blood derived CD34+ cells, which then populated in the mouse bone marrow, spleen and humanized TEB (hTEB). 11 weeks after CD34+ transplantation, metastatic breast cancer cells (MDA‐MB‐231BO) were orthotopically injected. Cancer cell injection resulted in the formation of a primary tumor and metastasis to the hTEB and mouse organs. Less frequent metastasis and lower tumor burden were observed in hematochimeric mice, suggesting an immune‐mediated response against the breast cancer cells. Overall, our results demonstrate the efficacy of tissue engineering approaches to study species‐specific cancer‐bone interactions. Further studies using genetically modified hematopoietic stem cells and bioengineered microenvironments will enable us to address the specific roles of signaling molecules regulating hematopoietic niches and cancer metastasis in vivo.

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Dive into the Elena M. De-Juan-Pardo's collaboration.

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Dietmar W. Hutmacher

Queensland University of Technology

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Felix M. Wunner

Queensland University of Technology

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Onur Bas

Queensland University of Technology

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Boris Michael Holzapfel

Queensland University of Technology

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Christoph Meinert

Queensland University of Technology

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Jeremy G. Baldwin

Queensland University of Technology

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Stuart John Ellem

Monash Institute of Medical Research

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Travis J. Klein

Queensland University of Technology

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