Publication | Open Access
Bone tissue engineering with a collagen–hydroxyapatite scaffold and culture expanded bone marrow stromal cells
149
Citations
33
References
2014
Year
Tissue EngineeringPure Ceramic ScaffoldEngineeringBone Tissue EngineeringBone RepairBiomedical EngineeringOsteoporosisOrthopaedic SurgeryRegenerative MedicineSynthetic Bone SubstituteRegenerative BiomaterialsTranslational Tissue EngineeringBone RemodelingCollagen-ha ScaffoldMatrix BiologyTissue RepairRegenerative EngineeringCollagen–hydroxyapatite ScaffoldFunctional Tissue EngineeringCell BiologyMesenchymal Stem CellBone MetabolismDevelopmental BiologyStem Cell EngineeringCommercial ScaffoldMedicineBiomaterials
Osteoprogenitor cells combined with supportive biomaterials represent a promising approach to advance the standard of care for bone grafting procedures. However, this approach faces challenges, including inconsistent bone formation, cell survival in the implant, and appropriate biomaterial degradation. We have developed a collagen-hydroxyapatite (HA) scaffold that supports consistent osteogenesis by donor-derived osteoprogenitors, and is more easily degraded than a pure ceramic scaffold. Herein, the material properties are characterized as well as cell attachment, viability, and progenitor distribution in vitro. Furthermore, we examined the biological performance in vivo in a critical-size mouse calvarial defect. To aid in the evaluation of the in-house collagen-HA scaffold, the in vivo performance was compared with a commercial collagen-HA scaffold (Healos(®) , Depuy). The in-house collagen-HA scaffold supported consistent bone formation by predominantly donor-derived osteoblasts, nearly completely filling a 3.5 mm calvarial defect with bone in all samples (n = 5) after 3 weeks of implantation. In terms of bone formation and donor cell retention at 3 weeks postimplantation, no statistical difference was found between the in-house and commercial scaffold following quantitative histomorphometry. The collagen-HA scaffold presented here is an open and well-defined platform that supports robust bone formation and should facilitate the further development of collagen-hydroxyapatite biomaterials for bone tissue engineering.
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