Leukocytes continuously circulate our body through the blood and lymphatic vessels. To survey invaders or abnormalities and defend our body against them, blood-circulating leukocytes migrate from the blood vessels into the interstitial tissue space (leukocyte extravasation) and exit the interstitial tissue space through draining lymphatic vessels (leukocyte intravasation). In the process of leukocyte trafficking, leukocytes recognize and respond to multiple biophysical and biochemical cues in these vascular microenvironments to determine adequate migration and adhesion pathways. As leukocyte trafficking is an essential part of the immune system and is involved in numerous immune diseases and related immunotherapies, researchers have attempted to identify the key biophysical and biochemical factors that might be responsible for leukocyte migration, adhesion, and trafficking. Although intravital live imaging of in vivo animal models has been remarkably advanced and utilized, bioengineered in vitro models that recapitulate complicated in vivo vascular structure and microenvironments are needed to better understand leukocyte trafficking since these in vitro models better allow for spatiotemporal analyses of leukocyte behaviors, decoupling of interdependent biological factors, better controlling of experimental parameters, reproducible experiments, and quantitative cellular analyses. This review discusses bioengineered in vitro model systems that are developed to study leukocyte interactions with complex microenvironments of blood and lymphatic vessels. This review focuses on the emerging concepts and methods in generating relevant biophysical and biochemical cues. Finally, the review concludes with expert perspectives on the future research directions for investigating leukocyte and vascular biology using the in vitro models.
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April 2021
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The cover image is an illustrative representation of chloroplast ATP synthases in a thylakoid membrane. In photosynthetic organisms the rotor complex of the ATP synthase (blue and cyan) is specifically adapted to physiological needs of the plant or cyanobacterial cell. For more details, see the review by Cheuk and Meier (pages 541–550). The figure was made by Anthony Cheuk.
Review Article|
April 12 2021
Bioengineered in vitro models of leukocyte–vascular interactions
Jaehyun Lee;
Jaehyun Lee
1Nancy E. and Peter C. Meinig School of Biomedical Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, U.S.A.
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Cort B. Breuer;
Cort B. Breuer
2Department of Biological Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, U.S.A.
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Esak Lee
1Nancy E. and Peter C. Meinig School of Biomedical Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, U.S.A.
Correspondence: Esak Lee (el767@cornell.edu)
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Biochem Soc Trans (2021) 49 (2): 693–704.
Article history
Received:
October 14 2020
Revision Received:
March 12 2021
Accepted:
March 18 2021
Citation
Jaehyun Lee, Cort B. Breuer, Esak Lee; Bioengineered in vitro models of leukocyte–vascular interactions. Biochem Soc Trans 30 April 2021; 49 (2): 693–704. doi: https://doi.org/10.1042/BST20200620
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