Back to Search Start Over

Engineering Injectable Bone Using Bone Marrow Stromal Cell Aggregates

Authors :
Dongyang Ma
Liling Ren
Jianxue Li
Tianqiu Mao
Hong Yao
Cuiping Zhong
Yanpu Liu
Fulin Chen
Jinlong Zhao
Source :
Stem Cells and Development. 20:989-999
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Mary Ann Liebert Inc, 2011.

Abstract

With the increasing popularity of minimally invasive surgery, to develop an injectable bone would be highly preferable for the repair of bone nonunions and defects. However, the use of dissociated cells and exogenous carriers to construct injectable bone faces several drawbacks. To circumvent these limitations, we first harvested a cell sheet from rabbit bone marrow stromal cells using a continuous culture method and a scraping technique. The obtained sheet was then cut into fragments of multicellular aggregates, each of which was composed of a certain number of cells, extracellular matrix, and intercellular connections. The aggregates showed apparent mineralization properties, high alkaline phosphatase activity, increased osteocalcin content, and upregulated bone markers, implying their in vitro osteogenic potential. Then, serum-free medium (the control group), dissociated cell suspension (the cell group), and suspension of multicellular aggregates (the aggregate group) were injected subcutaneously on the back of the nude mice to evaluate ectopic bone formation. The results revealed that the aggregate group showed significantly larger and denser bone at the injection sites than the cell group, whereas bone formation did not occur in the control group. Additionally, when injecting them locally into the mandibular fracture gap of delayed healing in a rabbit model, we observed the most improved bone healing in the aggregate group. More cells survive and retain at the injection sites in the aggregate group than that in the cell group postoperatively. Our study indicates that the multicellular aggregates might be considered a promising strategy to generate injectable bone tissue and improve the efficacy of cell therapy.

Details

ISSN :
15578534 and 15473287
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Stem Cells and Development
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1cb56e2868896f1a579476878526b664