Introduction: Cardiac implantable electronic devices manage arrhythmias but are limited by mechanical failures, infection risks, and poor long-term biocompatibility. Developing a biological alternative that restores intrinsic pacemaking remains a key clinical challenge. Methods: We developed cardiac scaffolds from porcine atrioventricular nodes using an optimized Tergitol-based decellularization protocol. Morphological, ultrastructural, proteomic, and mechanical analyses were conducted to assess ECM integrity and preservation of native architecture. Results: The decellularization process effectively removed cellular and nuclear components while preserving three-dimensional structure, collagen content, and overall ECM organization. Analyses confirmed that key features essential for pacemaker tissue support were maintained. Discussion: Our findings demonstrate that the scaffold retains native characteristics suitable for biologically inspired pacemaker applications. This work provides a foundation for ECM-derived hydrogel development, cytocompatibility testing, and integration with cardiomyocytes in next-generation tissue-engineered cardiac scaffolds.

New frontiers in porcine atrioventricular node decellularization: preserving extracellular matrix architecture for biological scaffolds

Mimmi, Selena;Iaccino, Enrico;
2026-01-01

Abstract

Introduction: Cardiac implantable electronic devices manage arrhythmias but are limited by mechanical failures, infection risks, and poor long-term biocompatibility. Developing a biological alternative that restores intrinsic pacemaking remains a key clinical challenge. Methods: We developed cardiac scaffolds from porcine atrioventricular nodes using an optimized Tergitol-based decellularization protocol. Morphological, ultrastructural, proteomic, and mechanical analyses were conducted to assess ECM integrity and preservation of native architecture. Results: The decellularization process effectively removed cellular and nuclear components while preserving three-dimensional structure, collagen content, and overall ECM organization. Analyses confirmed that key features essential for pacemaker tissue support were maintained. Discussion: Our findings demonstrate that the scaffold retains native characteristics suitable for biologically inspired pacemaker applications. This work provides a foundation for ECM-derived hydrogel development, cytocompatibility testing, and integration with cardiomyocytes in next-generation tissue-engineered cardiac scaffolds.
2026
atrioventricular node
biological pacemaker
cardiac scaffold
decellularized extracellular matrix (dECM)
tergitol-based protocol
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12317/118102
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