Publication | Closed Access
Incipient Analysis of Mesenchymal Stem-cell-derived Osteogenesis
80
Citations
23
References
2001
Year
Tissue EngineeringEngineeringAdult Stem CellBone RepairIncipient AnalysisRegenerative MedicineTranslational Tissue EngineeringBone RemodelingStem CellsTissue Regeneration StrategiesStem Cell TherapiesMesenchymal Stem CellCell BiologyOsteocalcinDevelopmental BiologyStem Cell ResearchParallel ImplantsMedicineCell Gene Expression
Tissue regeneration strategies invoke cell-based therapies for effective tissue formation. Current assessment of mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) directed bone regeneration during in vivo assays is dependent on histologic determination of bone formation. It was the aim of this study to determine the relationship between bone sialoprotein (BSP) expression and osteocalcin expression with subsequent osteogenesis occurring in MSC-based implants. RT-PCR assessment of human actin, collagen type I, BSP, and osteocalcin indicated that undifferentiated cells did not express BSP or osteocalcin. Three weeks following implantation, human BSP could be identified in RNAs isolated from the retrieved implants. For every implant from which human BSP cDNA was amplified, parallel implants harvested at 6 weeks demonstrated bone formation at the histologic level. This study confirms that, in the context of the severe combined immunodeficiency disease (SCID) mouse model, culture-expanded, cryopreserved human MSCs have osteogenic potential and demonstrates that implanted cell gene expression can reveal the early onset of bone formation.
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