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Dive into the research topics where Lisa E. Freed is active.

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Featured researches published by Lisa E. Freed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004

Functional assembly of engineered myocardium by electrical stimulation of cardiac myocytes cultured on scaffolds.

Milica Radisic; Hyoungshin Park; Helen Shing; Thomas Consi; Frederick J. Schoen; Robert Langer; Lisa E. Freed; Gordana Vunjak-Novakovic

The major challenge of tissue engineering is directing the cells to establish the physiological structure and function of the tissue being replaced across different hierarchical scales. To engineer myocardium, biophysical regulation of the cells needs to recapitulate multiple signals present in the native heart. We hypothesized that excitation–contraction coupling, critical for the development and function of a normal heart, determines the development and function of engineered myocardium. To induce synchronous contractions of cultured cardiac constructs, we applied electrical signals designed to mimic those in the native heart. Over only 8 days in vitro, electrical field stimulation induced cell alignment and coupling, increased the amplitude of synchronous construct contractions by a factor of 7, and resulted in a remarkable level of ultrastructural organization. Development of conductive and contractile properties of cardiac constructs was concurrent, with strong dependence on the initiation and duration of electrical stimulation.


Nature Materials | 2008

Accordion-like honeycombs for tissue engineering of cardiac anisotropy.

George C. Engelmayr; Mingyu Cheng; Christopher J. Bettinger; Jeffrey T. Borenstein; Robert Langer; Lisa E. Freed

Tissue engineered grafts may be useful in myocardial repair, however previous scaffolds have been structurally incompatible with recapitulating cardiac anisotropy. Utilizing microfabrication techniques, a novel accordion-like honeycomb microstructure was rendered in poly(glycerol sebacate) to yield porous, elastomeric 3-D scaffolds with controllable stiffness and anisotropy. Accordion-like honeycomb scaffolds with cultured neonatal rat heart cells demonstrated utility via: (1) closely matched mechanical properties compared to native adult rat right ventricular myocardium, with stiffnesses controlled by polymer curing time; (2) heart cell contractility inducible by electric field stimulation with directionally-dependent electrical excitation thresholds (p<0.05); and (3) greater heart cell alignment (p<0.0001) than isotropic control scaffolds. Prototype bilaminar scaffolds with 3-D interconnected pore networks yielded electrically excitable grafts with multi-layered neonatal rat heart cells. Accordion-like honeycombs can thus overcome principal structural-mechanical limitations of previous scaffolds, promoting the formation of grafts with aligned heart cells and mechanical properties more closely resembling native myocardium.


Biotechnology Progress | 1998

Dynamic cell seeding of polymer scaffolds for cartilage tissue engineering.

Gordana Vunjak-Novakovic; Bojana Obradovic; Ivan Martin; Predrag M. Bursac; Robert Langer; Lisa E. Freed

Cell seeding of three‐dimensional polymer scaffolds is the first step of the cultivation of engineered tissues in bioreactors. Seeding requirements of large scaffolds to make implants for potential clinical use include: (a) high yield, to maximize the utilization of donor cells, (b) high kinetic rate, to minimize the time in suspension for anchorage‐dependent and shear‐sensitive cells, and (c) high and spatially uniform distribution of attached cells, for rapid and uniform tissue regeneration. Highly porous, fibrous polyglycolic acid scaffolds, 5–10 mm in diameter and 2–5 mm thick, were seeded with bovine articular chondrocytes in well‐mixed spinner flasks. Essentially, all cells attached throughout the scaffold volume within 1 day. Mixing promoted the formation of 20–32‐μm diameter cell aggregates that enhanced the kinetics of cell attachment without compromising the uniformity of cell distribution. The kinetics and possible mechanisms of cell seeding were related to the formation of cell aggregates by a simple mathematical model that can be used to optimize seeding conditions for cartilage tissue engineering.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 1999

Cardiac tissue engineering: cell seeding, cultivation parameters, and tissue construct characterization.

Maria Papadaki; Maria Rupnick; Frederick J. Schoen; Nenad Bursac; Robert Langer; Lisa E. Freed; Gordana Vunjak-Novakovic

Cardiac tissue engineering has been motivated by the need to create functional tissue equivalents for scientific studies and cardiac tissue repair. We previously demonstrated that contractile cardiac cell-polymer constructs can be cultivated using isolated cells, 3-dimensional scaffolds, and bioreactors. In the present work, we examined the effects of (1) cell source (neonatal rat or embryonic chick), (2) initial cell seeding density, (3) cell seeding vessel, and (4) tissue culture vessel on the structure and composition of engineered cardiac muscle. Constructs seeded under well-mixed conditions with rat heart cells at a high initial density ((6-8) x 10(6) cells/polymer scaffold) maintained structural integrity and contained macroscopic contractile areas (approximately 20 mm(2)). Seeding in rotating vessels (laminar flow) rather than mixed flasks (turbulent flow) resulted in 23% higher seeding efficiency and 20% less cell damage as assessed by medium lactate dehydrogenase levels (p < 0.05). Advantages of culturing constructs under mixed rather than static conditions included the maintenance of metabolic parameters in physiological ranges, 2-4 times higher construct cellularity (p &le 0.0001), more aerobic cell metabolism, and a more physiological, elongated cell shape. Cultivations in rotating bioreactors, in which flow patterns are laminar and dynamic, yielded constructs with a more active, aerobic metabolism as compared to constructs cultured in mixed or static flasks. After 1-2 weeks of cultivation, tissue constructs expressed cardiac specific proteins and ultrastructural features and had approximately 2-6 times lower cellularity (p < 0.05) but similar metabolic activity per unit cell when compared to native cardiac tissue.


Biomaterials | 1994

Wetting of poly(l-lactic acid) and poly(dl-lactic-co-glycolic acid) foams for tissue culture

Antonios G. Mikos; Michelle D. Lyman; Lisa E. Freed; Robert Langer

Biodegradable foams of hydrophobic polymers can be efficiently wet by two-step immersion in ethanol and water, which overcomes the hindered entry of water into air-filled pores. Ethanol readily enters into the porous polymer, after which it is diluted and replaced by water. This method was evaluated for porous disks of poly(L-lactic acid) (PLLA) and poly(DL-lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) foams of copolymer ratios 85:15 and 50:50. For PLLA disks of 0.88 porosity and 1730 microns thickness, prewetting with ethanol for 1 h increased the percentage of void volume filled with water after 48 h from 23 to 79%. The same enhanced entry of water was also observed for prewet PLGA 85:15 disks of 0.86 porosity and 1300 microns thickness, which exhibited an increase from 59 to 97% void volume occupied by water. Furthermore, the water entry even after 1 h was very close to its plateau value for all prewet polymers tested. In recent studies, this method has been useful in uniformly seeding three-dimensional biodegradable polymer substrates for cell and tissue culture.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 1999

Cardiac muscle tissue engineering: toward an in vitro model for electrophysiological studies

Nenad Bursac; Maria Papadaki; Richard J. Cohen; Frederick J. Schoen; Solomon R. Eisenberg; R. Carrier; Gordana Vunjak-Novakovic; Lisa E. Freed

The objective of this study was to establish a three-dimensional (3-D) in vitro model system of cardiac muscle for electrophysiological studies. Primary neonatal rat ventricular cells containing lower or higher fractions of cardiac myocytes were cultured on polymeric scaffolds in bioreactors to form regular or enriched cardiac muscle constructs, respectively. After 1 wk, all constructs contained a peripheral tissue-like region (50-70 micrometer thick) in which differentiated cardiac myocytes were organized in multiple layers in a 3-D configuration. Indexes of cell size (protein/DNA) and metabolic activity (tetrazolium conversion/DNA) were similar for constructs and neonatal rat ventricles. Electrophysiological studies conducted using a linear array of extracellular electrodes showed that the peripheral region of constructs exhibited relatively homogeneous electrical properties and sustained macroscopically continuous impulse propagation on a centimeter-size scale. Electrophysiological properties of enriched constructs were superior to those of regular constructs but inferior to those of native ventricles. These results demonstrate that 3-D cardiac muscle constructs can be engineered with cardiac-specific structural and electrophysiological properties and used for in vitro impulse propagation studies.The objective of this study was to establish a three-dimensional (3-D) in vitro model system of cardiac muscle for electrophysiological studies. Primary neonatal rat ventricular cells containing lower or higher fractions of cardiac myocytes were cultured on polymeric scaffolds in bioreactors to form regular or enriched cardiac muscle constructs, respectively. After 1 wk, all constructs contained a peripheral tissue-like region (50-70 μm thick) in which differentiated cardiac myocytes were organized in multiple layers in a 3-D configuration. Indexes of cell size (protein/DNA) and metabolic activity (tetrazolium conversion/DNA) were similar for constructs and neonatal rat ventricles. Electrophysiological studies conducted using a linear array of extracellular electrodes showed that the peripheral region of constructs exhibited relatively homogeneous electrical properties and sustained macroscopically continuous impulse propagation on a centimeter-size scale. Electrophysiological properties of enriched constructs were superior to those of regular constructs but inferior to those of native ventricles. These results demonstrate that 3-D cardiac muscle constructs can be engineered with cardiac-specific structural and electrophysiological properties and used for in vitro impulse propagation studies.


Tissue Engineering | 2002

Perfusion Improves Tissue Architecture of Engineered Cardiac Muscle

Maria Rupnick; Robert Langer; Frederick J. Schoen; Lisa E. Freed; Gordana Vunjak-Novakovic

Cardiac muscle with a certain threshold thickness, uniformity of tissue architecture, and functionality would expand the therapeutic options currently available to patients with congenital or acquired cardiac defects. Cardiac constructs cultured in well-mixed medium had an approximately 100-microm-thick peripheral tissue-like region around a relatively cell-free interior, a structure consistent with the presence of concentration gradients within the tissue. We hypothesized that direct perfusion of cultured constructs can reduce diffusional distances for mass transport, improve control of oxygen, pH, nutrients and metabolites in the cell microenvironment, and thereby increase the thickness and spatial uniformity of engineered cardiac muscle. To test this hypothesis, constructs (9.5-mm-diameter, 2-mm-thick discs) based on neonatal rat cardiac myocytes and fibrous polyglycolic acid scaffolds were cultured either directly perfused with medium or in control spinner flasks. Perfusion improved the spatial uniformity of cell distribution and enhanced the expression of cardiac-specific markers, presumably due to the improved control of local microenvironmental conditions within the forming tissue. Medium perfusion could thus be utilized to better mimic the transport conditions within native cardiac muscle and enable in vitro engineering of cardiac constructs with clinically useful thicknesses.


Journal of Orthopaedic Research | 2001

Integration of engineered cartilage.

B. Obradovic; Ivan Martin; Robert F. Padera; Steven Treppo; Lisa E. Freed; Gordana Vunjak-Novakovic

The structure and function of cartilaginous constructs, engineered in vitro using bovine articular chondrocytes, biodegradable scaffolds and bioreactors, can be modulated by the conditions and duration of tissue cultivation. We hypothesized that the integrative properties of engineered cartilage depend on developmental stage of the construct and the extracellular matrix content of adjacent cartilage, and that some aspects of integration can be studied under controlled in vitro conditions. Disc‐shaped constructs (cultured for 5±1 days or 5±1 weeks) or explants (untreated or trypsin treated cartilage) were sutured into ring‐shaped explants (untreated or trypsin treated cartilage) to form composites that were cultured for an additional 1‐8 weeks in bioreactors and evaluated biochemically, histologically and mechanically (compressive stiffness of the central disk, adhesive strength of the integration interface). Immature constructs had poorer mechanical properties but integrated better than either more mature constructs or cartilage explants. Integration of immature constructs involved cell proliferation and the progressive formation of cartilaginous tissue, in contrast to the integration of more mature constructs or native cartilage which involved only the secretion of extracellular matrix components. Integration patterns correlated with the adhesive strength of the disc‐ring interface, which was markedly higher for immature constructs than for either more mature constructs or cartilage explants. Trypsin treatment of the adjacent cartilage further enhanced the integration of immature constructs.


Biomaterials | 2000

In vitro generation of osteochondral composites

D Schaefer; Ivan Martin; P Shastri; Robert F. Padera; Robert Langer; Lisa E. Freed; Gordana Vunjak-Novakovic

Osteochondral repair involves the regeneration of articular cartilage and underlying bone, and the development of a well-defined tissue-to-tissue interface. We investigated tissue engineering of three-dimensional cartilage/bone composites based on biodegradable polymer scaffolds, chondrogenic and osteogenic cells. Cartilage constructs were created by cultivating primary bovine calf articular chondrocytes on polyglycolic acid meshes; bone-like constructs were created by cultivating expanded bovine calf periosteal cells on foams made of a blend of poly-lactic-co-glycolic acid and polyethylene glycol. Pairs of constructs were sutured together after 1 or 4 weeks of isolated culture, and the resulting composites were cultured for an additional 4 weeks. All composites were structurally stable and consisted of well-defined cartilaginous and bone-like tissues. The fraction of glycosaminoglycan in the cartilaginous regions increased with time, both in isolated and composite cultures. In contrast, the mineralization in bone-like regions increased during isolated culture, but remained approximately constant during the subsequent composite culture. The integration at the cartilage/bone interface was generally better for composites consisting of immature (1-week) than mature (4-week) constructs. This study demonstrates that osteochondral tissue composites for potential use in osteochondral repair can be engineered in vitro by culturing mammalian chondrocytes and periosteal cells on appropriate polymer scaffolds.


Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews | 1998

Culture of organized cell communities.

Lisa E. Freed; Gordana Vunjak-Novakovic

Cells cultured in vitro will tend to retain their differentiated phenotype under conditions that resemble their natural in vivo environment, for example, when cultured on polymer scaffolds in tissue culture bioreactors. In this chapter, we define organized cell communities as three-dimensional in vitro grown cell-polymer constructs that display important structural and functional features of the natural tissue. We review representative studies in which the research goal was to culture organized cell communities resembling cartilage, bone, skeletal muscle or cardiac-like tissue. These constructs can potentially serve as tissue equivalents for in vivo transplantation or as a model system for the in vitro testing of cell and tissue-level responses to molecular, mechanical or genetic manipulations.

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Robert Langer

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Hyoungshin Park

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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George C. Engelmayr

Pennsylvania State University

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Robert F. Padera

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Joachim Seidel

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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