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1.
Tissue Eng Part A ; 17(21-22): 2641-50, 2011 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21657983

ABSTRACT

Small facial skeletal muscles often have no autologous donor source to effect surgical reconstruction. Autologously derived muscles could be engineered for replacement tissue, but must be vascularized and innervated to be functional. As a critical step, engineered muscle must mimic the morphology, protein and gene expression, and function of native muscle. This study utilized a self-assembly process to engineer three-dimensional (3D) muscle from a statically strained muscle cell monolayer. Primary mouse myoblasts (PMMs) and mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) were separately proliferated and coseeded on a fibrin sheet with anchored sutures. Within 10 days of initiating PMM differentiation, the cell-gel layer contracted, lifted, and rolled into a cylindrical 3D structure around the tendon-like suture anchors; the myotubes longitudinally aligned along the lines of tensile force. The objectives of this study were to characterize these engineered muscles and to elucidate the role of the fibroblasts in the self-assembly process. Fibroblasts maintained myotube viability, mediated fibrin degradation, and assisted in muscle self-assembly. The optimal 1:1 PMM:MEF ratio resulted in tissue morphology remarkably similar to native muscle. Through gene and protein expression assays, the development and maturation of the engineered muscle tissue was demonstrated to recapitulate normal skeletal muscle development.


Subject(s)
Fibroblasts/cytology , Muscle, Skeletal/cytology , Tissue Engineering/methods , Animals , Cells, Cultured , Embryo, Mammalian/cytology , Female , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Myoblasts/cytology , Pregnancy
2.
Chem Biol ; 17(4): 323-32, 2010 Apr 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20416504

ABSTRACT

Activity based metabolomic profiling (ABMP) allows unbiased discovery of enzymatic activities encoded by genes of unknown function, and applies liquid-chromatography mass spectrometry (LC-MS) to analyze the impact of a recombinant enzyme on the homologous cellular extract as a physiologic library of potential substrates and products. The Mycobacterium tuberculosis protein Rv1248c was incompletely characterized as a thiamine diphosphate-dependent alpha-ketoglutarate decarboxylase. Here, recombinant Rv1248c catalyzed consumption of alpha-ketoglutarate in a mycobacterial small molecule extract with matched production of 5-hydroxylevulinate (HLA) in a reaction predicted to require glyoxylate. As confirmed using pure substrates by LC-MS, (1)H-NMR, chemical trapping, and intracellular metabolite profiling, Rv1248c catalyzes C-C bond formation between the activated aldehyde of alpha-ketoglutarate and the carbonyl of glyoxylate to yield 2-hydroxy-3-oxoadipate (HOA), which decomposes to HLA. Thus, Rv1248c encodes an HOA synthase.


Subject(s)
Metabolomics/methods , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/enzymology , Oxo-Acid-Lyases/metabolism , Aldehyde-Ketone Transferases , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/genetics , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular
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