Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.473, No.3, 733-742, 2016
Stem cell-derived vasculature: A potent and multidimensional technology for basic research, disease modeling, and tissue engineering
Proper blood vessel networks are necessary for constructing and re-constructing tissues, promoting wound healing, and delivering metabolic necessities throughout the body. Conversely, an understanding of vascular dysfunction has provided insight into the pathogenesis and progression of diseases both common and rare. Recent advances in stem cell-based regenerative medicine - including advances in stem cell technologies and related progress in bioscaffold design and complex tissue engineering - have allowed rapid advances in the field of vascular biology, leading in turn to more advanced modeling of vascular pathophysiology and improved engineering of vascularized tissue constructs. In this review we examine recent advances in the field of stem cell-derived vasculature, providing an overview of stem cell technologies as a source for vascular cell types and then focusing on their use in three primary areas: studies of vascular development and angiogenesis, improved disease modeling, and the engineering of vascularized constructs for tissue-level modeling and cell-based therapies. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Stem cell;Pluripotent stem cell;Induced pluripotent stem cell;Embryonic stem cell;Endothelial cells;Vascular;Vasculature;Vascular biology;Smooth muscle;Tissue engineered vasculature;Blood vessels;Stem cell therapy;Tissue engineered blood vessels