Publication | Open Access
Induction of angiogenesis in tissue-engineered scaffolds designed for bone repair: A combined gene therapy–cell transplantation approach
190
Citations
32
References
2008
Year
Tissue EngineeringEngineeringBiomaterials DesignBone RepairBiofabricationTissue TransplantationBiomedical EngineeringOrthopaedic SurgeryRegenerative MedicineSynthetic Bone SubstituteRegenerative BiomaterialsTranslational Tissue EngineeringTissue-engineered ScaffoldsVascularized Bone GraftTissue RepairCell-based Drug DeliveryScaffoldsVascular Tissue EngineeringPlaga ScaffoldsFunctional Tissue EngineeringNeovascularizationCell BiologyTissue RegenerationMicrosphere ScaffoldsEc TransplantationMedicineBiomaterialsExtracellular Matrix
One of the fundamental principles underlying tissue engineering approaches is that newly formed tissue must maintain sufficient vascularization to support its growth. Efforts to induce vascular growth into tissue-engineered scaffolds have recently been dedicated to developing novel strategies to deliver specific biological factors that direct the recruitment of endothelial cell (EC) progenitors and their differentiation. The challenge, however, lies in orchestration of the cells, appropriate biological factors, and optimal factor doses. This study reports an approach as a step forward to resolving this dilemma by combining an ex vivo gene transfer strategy and EC transplantation. The utility of this approach was evaluated by using 3D poly(lactide-co-glycolide) (PLAGA) sintered microsphere scaffolds for bone tissue engineering applications. Our goal was achieved by isolation and transfection of adipose-derived stromal cells (ADSCs) with adenovirus encoding the cDNA of VEGF. We demonstrated that the combination of VEGF releasing ADSCs and ECs results in marked vascular growth within PLAGA scaffolds. We thereby delineate the potential of ADSCs to promote vascular growth into biomaterials.
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