| Literature DB >> 22345091 |
Xuechao Yang1, Guangli Han1, Xin Pang1, Mingwen Fan1.
Abstract
In this study, porous chitosan/collagen scaffolds were prepared through a freeze-drying process, and loaded with the plasmid vector encoding human bone morphogenetic protein-7 (BMP-7) gene. To investigate the feasibility and efficacy of this gene-activated scaffold on dental tissue engineering, human dental pulp stem cells (DPSCs) were seeded in this scaffold for in vitro and in vivo study. In vitro results indicated that cells can be transfected successfully by loaded plasmid and secrete BMP-7 until day 24. Evaluation of DNA content, ALP activity, calcium content, SEM, and real-time PCR revealed that cells on gene-activated scaffold showed better proliferation properties and odontoblastic differentiation behaviors than cells on pure scaffolds. Then, these cell-scaffold complexes were implanted subcutaneously and retrieved after 4 weeks for histology evaluation. In vivo results that gene-activated scaffold group could still trace the existence of tranfected cells at week 4 and showed the upregulated expression of DSPP compared to pure scaffold groups. On the basis of our results, chitosan/collagen-loaded BMP-7 DNA appears to be an effective substrate candidate for gene delivery and indeed enhanced DPSCs differentiation toward an odontoblast-like phenotype in vitro and in vivo. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part A:, 2012.Entities:
Keywords: bone morphogenetic protein; chitosan; collagen; dental pulp stem cells; tissue engineering
Year: 2012 PMID: 22345091 DOI: 10.1002/jbm.a.34064
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Mater Res A ISSN: 1549-3296 Impact factor: 4.396