Cell Reports (Dec 2018)

Engineering an Environment for the Study of Fibrosis: A 3D Human Muscle Model with Endothelium Specificity and Endomysium

  • Simone Bersini,
  • Mara Gilardi,
  • Giovanni S. Ugolini,
  • Veronica Sansoni,
  • Giuseppe Talò,
  • Silvia Perego,
  • Simona Zanotti,
  • Paola Ostano,
  • Marina Mora,
  • Monica Soncini,
  • Marco Vanoni,
  • Giovanni Lombardi,
  • Matteo Moretti

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 13
pp. 3858 – 3868.e4

Abstract

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Summary: The integration of vascular structures into in vitro cultured tissues provides realistic models of complex tissue-vascular interactions. Despite the incidence and impact of muscle-wasting disorders, advanced in vitro systems are still far from recapitulating the environmental complexity of skeletal muscle. Our model comprises differentiated human muscle fibers enveloped by a sheath of human muscle-derived fibroblasts and supported by a vascular network with mural-like cells. Here, we demonstrate the induction of muscle-specific endothelium and the self-organization of endomysial muscle fibroblasts mediated by endothelial cells. We use this model to mimic the fibrotic environment characterizing muscular dystrophies and to highlight key signatures of fibrosis that are neglected or underestimated in traditional 2D monocultures. Overall, this vascularized meso-scale cellular construct finely recapitulates the human skeletal muscle environment and provides an advanced solution for in vitro studies of muscle physiology and pathology. : Bersini et al. demonstrate the generation of a mesoscale model of the human muscle environment and prove its application for the study of fibrosis. This engineered muscle environment promotes the organ-specific differentiation of endothelial cells and the self-assembly of myofibers spontaneously wrapped by a continuous endomysium-like structure. Keywords: endothelial specificity, 3D vascularized muscle model, fibrosis, muscle environment