Engineering of osteoinductive grafts by isolation and expansion of ovine bone marrow stromal cells directly on 3D ceramic scaffolds
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2006
Abstract:
In this work, we investigated whether osteoinductive
constructs can be generated by isolation
and expansion of sheep bone marrow stromal cells
(BMSC) directly within three-dimensional (3D) ceramic
scaffolds, bypassing the typical phase of monolayer (2D)
expansion prior to scaffold loading. Nucleated cells from
sheep bone marrow aspirate were seeded into 3D ceramic
scaffolds either by static loading or under perfusion flow
and maintained in culture for up to 14 days. The resulting
constructs were exposed to enzymatic treatment to assess
the number and lineage of extracted cells, or implanted
subcutaneously in nude mice to test their capacity to
induce bone formation. As a control, BMSC expanded in
monolayer for 14 days were also seeded into the scaffolds
and implanted. BMSC could be isolated and expanded
directly in the 3D ceramic scaffolds, although they
proliferated slower than in 2D.Upon ectopic implantation,
the resulting constructs formed a higher amount of bone
tissue than constructs loaded with the same number of
2D-expanded cells. Constructs cultivated for 14 days
generated significantly more bone tissue than those
cultured for 3 days. No differences in bone formation
were found between samples seeded by static loading or
under perfusion. In conclusion, the culture of bone
marrow nucleated cells directly on 3D ceramic scaffolds
represents a promising approach to expand BMSC and
streamline the engineering of osteoinductive grafts.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Scaglione, Silvia
Link alla scheda completa:
Pubblicato in: