Litcius/Paper detail

A framework for developing sex-specific engineered heart models

Roberta I. Lock, Hadel Al Asafen, Sharon Fleischer, Manuel A. Tamargo, Yimu Zhao, Milica Radisic, Gordana Vunjak‐Novakovic

2021Nature Reviews Materials47 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The convergence of tissue engineering and patient-specific stem cell biology has enabled the engineering of in vitro tissue models that allow the study of patient-tailored treatment modalities. However, sex-related disparities in health and disease, from systemic hormonal influences to cellular-level differences, are often overlooked in stem cell biology, tissue engineering and preclinical screening. The cardiovascular system, in particular, shows considerable sex-related differences, which need to be considered in cardiac tissue engineering. In this Review, we analyse sex-related properties of the heart muscle in the context of health and disease, and discuss a framework for including sex-based differences in human cardiac tissue engineering. We highlight how sex-based features can be implemented at the cellular and tissue levels, and how sex-specific cardiac models could advance the study of cardiovascular diseases. Finally, we define design criteria for sex-specific cardiac tissue engineering and provide an outlook to future research possibilities beyond the cardiovascular system. Sex-related differences in health and disease are often overlooked in tissue engineering. This Review discusses sex-based differences in the (patho)physiology of the cardiovascular system, providing a design framework for sex-specific cardiac tissue models and an outlook to developing sex-specific in vitro models in general.

Topics & Concepts

Tissue engineeringContext (archaeology)DiseaseModalitiesStem cellMedicineBiologyBioinformaticsPathologyBiomedical engineeringPaleontologySocial scienceSociologyGeneticsTissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine