The present invention provides an ex vivo vascular remodeling methods and system
by which an excised, small diameter blood vessel can be harvested and expanded
to provide viable vascular grafts, as demonstrated at the physical and molecular
levels, and as optimized in vivo. The tissue-engineered vessels generated by the
present invention closely resemble native vessels in terms of structure, histologically,
including endothelial coverage and intricate structural components such as the
internal elastic lamina, viability (as measured with the MTT assay and TUNEL analysis),
and function (vasoactivity, mechanical and biomechanical properties). Thus, the
resulting vascular grafts behave in a manner similar to native arteries in terms
of mechanical integrity, and provide clinically relevant patency rates when implanted
in vivo. Moreover, the ex vivo methods and system permit the precise control of
the mechanical environment involving the excised vessel, while at the same time
permitting careful monitoring of the resulting growth/remodeling, thereby opening
new avenues of research regarding the mechanical stimuli responsible for specific
aspects of remodeling in vivo.