Ovine Mesenchymal Stem Cell Chondrogenesis on a Novel 3D-Printed Hybrid Scaffold In Vitro.
Arianna De MoriAgathe HeyraudFrancesca TalliaGordon W BlunnJulian R JonesTosca RoncadaJustin P CobbTalal Al-JabriPublished in: Bioengineering (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
This study evaluated the use of silica/poly(tetrahydrofuran)/poly(ε-caprolactone) (SiO 2 /PTHF/PCL-diCOOH) 3D-printed scaffolds, with channel sizes of either 200 (SC-200) or 500 (SC-500) µm, as biomaterials to support the chondrogenesis of sheep bone marrow stem cells (oBMSC), under in vitro conditions. The objective was to validate the potential use of SiO 2 /PTHF/PCL-diCOOH for prospective in vivo ovine studies. The behaviour of oBMSC, with and without the use of exogenous growth factors, on SiO 2 /PTHF/PCL-diCOOH scaffolds was investigated by analysing cell attachment, viability, proliferation, morphology, expression of chondrogenic genes (RT-qPCR), deposition of aggrecan, collagen II, and collagen I (immunohistochemistry), and quantification of sulphated glycosaminoglycans (GAGs). The results showed that all the scaffolds supported cell attachment and proliferation with upregulation of chondrogenic markers and the deposition of a cartilage extracellular matrix (collagen II and aggrecan). Notably, SC-200 showed superior performance in terms of cartilage gene expression. These findings demonstrated that SiO 2 /PTHF/PCL-diCOOH with 200 µm pore size are optimal for promoting chondrogenic differentiation of oBMSC, even without the use of growth factors.
Keyphrases
- tissue engineering
- mesenchymal stem cells
- extracellular matrix
- cell therapy
- bone marrow
- stem cells
- gene expression
- umbilical cord
- signaling pathway
- poor prognosis
- single cell
- dna methylation
- genome wide
- mass spectrometry
- climate change
- long non coding rna
- binding protein
- high resolution
- genome wide identification
- bioinformatics analysis