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Mesenchymal Stem Cell Culture within Perfusion Bioreactors Incorporating 3D-Printed Scaffolds Enables Improved Extracellular Vesicle Yield with Preserved Bioactivity.

Stephanie M KronstadtDivya B PatelLouis J BornDaniel LevyMax J LermanBhushan MahadikShannon T McLoughlinArafat FasuyiLauren FowlkesLauren Hoorens Van HeyningenAmaya ArandaSanaz Nourmohammadi AbadchiKai-Hua ChangAngela Ting Wei HsuSameer BengaliJohn W HarmonJohn P FisherSteven M Jay
Published in: Advanced healthcare materials (2023)
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are implicated as promising therapeutics and drug delivery vehicles in various diseases. However, successful clinical translation will depend on development of scalable biomanufacturing approaches, especially due to the documented low levels of intrinsic EV-associated cargo that may necessitate repeated doses to achieve clinical benefit in certain applications. Thus, here we assessed effects of a 3D-printed scaffold-perfusion bioreactor system on the production and bioactivity of EVs secreted from bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), a cell type widely implicated in generating EVs with therapeutic potential. The results indicate that perfusion bioreactor culture induces an ∼40-80-fold increase (depending on measurement method) in MSC EV production compared to conventional cell culture. Additionally, MSC EVs generated using the perfusion bioreactor system significantly improved wound healing in a diabetic mouse model, with increased CD31+ staining in wound bed tissue compared to animals treated with flask cell culture-generated MSC EVs. Overall, this study establishes a promising solution to a major EV translational bottleneck, with capacity for tunability for specific applications and general improvement alongside advancements in 3D-printing technologies. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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