| Literature DB >> 25666352 |
David W Green1, Hyuk-Jae Kwon2, Han-Sung Jung1,3.
Abstract
Nacre seashell is a natural osteoinductive biomaterial with strong effects on osteoprogenitors, osteoblasts, and osteoclasts during bone tissue formation and morphogenesis. Although nacre has shown, in one study, to induce bridging of new bone across large non-union bone defects in 8 individual human patients, there have been no succeeding human surgical studies to confirm this outstanding potency. But the molecular mechanisms associated with nacre osteoinduction and the influence on bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (BMSC's), skeletal stem cells or bone marrow stromal cells remain elusive. In this study we highlight the phenotypic and biochemical effects of Pinctada maxima nacre chips and the global nacre soluble protein matrix (SPM) on primary human bone marrow-derived stromal cells (hBMSCs) in vitro. In static co-culture with nacre chips, the hBMSCs secreted Alkaline phosphatase (ALP) at levels that exceeded bone morphogenetic protein (rhBMP-2) treatment. Concentrated preparation of SPM applied to Stro-1 selected hBMSC's led to rapid ALP secretions, at concentrations exceeding the untreated controls even in osteogenic conditions. Within 21 days the same population of Stro-1 selected hBMSCs proliferated and secreted collagens I-IV, indicating the premature onset of an osteoblast phenotype. The same SPM was found to promote unselected hBMSC differentiation with osteocalcin detected at 7 days, and proliferation increased at 7 days in a dose-dependent manner. In conclusion, nacre particles and nacre SPM induced the early stages of human bone cell differentiation, indicating that they may be promising soluble factors with osteoinductive capacity in primary human bone cell progenitors such as, hBMSC's.Entities:
Keywords: bone morphogenetic protein; human bone marrow stromal cells; mesenchymal stem cells; nacre; nacre soluble matrix proteins; osteoinduction
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25666352 PMCID: PMC4363727 DOI: 10.14348/molcells.2015.2315
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cells ISSN: 1016-8478 Impact factor: 5.034
Fig. 1.(A) C2C12 pro-myoblast cell 3D pellet co-cultured with nacre particles in basic media and stained for ALP at day 7 (scale bar =15 μm). (B) C2C12 pro-myoblast cell 3D pellet cultured in basic media supplemented with 100 ng/ml of rhBMP-2 and stained for ALP at day 7 (scale bar = 15 μm). (C) C2C12 pro-myoblast ALP expression in the presence of nacre chips at 14 days (scale bar = 25 μm). (D) Brightfield microscope image of human osteoprogenitors co-cultured with nacre chips (red arrow) at 7 days on tissue culture plastic (scale bar = 20 μm). (E) Human osteoprogenitor ALP activity with and without nacre at 7 days, in osteogenic and basic media compared with rhBMP-2 treatment (hBMSC basic media versus rhBMP-2, p < 0.05; hBMSC basic and osteogenic media with nacre versus HBMSC basic and osteogenic media without nacre, p < 0.01). (F) A table showing the variation in patient hBMSC ALP expression within and between Nacre and rhBMP-2 treated in vitro culture samples (n = 3).
Fig. 2.(A) Dose-dependent action of extracted SPM on hBMSC ALP activity at day 3. (B) Dose-dependent action of extracted SPM on hBMSC number at day 28. (C) Comparison of ALP activity at 24 h between SPM-treated (180 μg/ml) immunoselected hMSC and hMSCs cultured in osteogenic media (p < 0.001, n = 4). (D) Comparison of ALP activity at 21 days between SPM-treated (180 μg/ml) immuneselected hMSC and hMSCs cultured in osteogenic media (p < 0.01, n = 4). (E) Quantitative collagen binding assay comparing immouno-selected hMSCs treated with SPM and hMSCs without added SPM (p < 0.001, n = 4).