| Literature DB >> 26703748 |
Alexander Röder1, Elena García-Gareta2,3, Christina Theodoropoulos4, Nikola Ristovski5, Keith A Blackwood6, Maria A Woodruff7.
Abstract
The use of biopolymers as a three dimensional (3D) support structure for cell growth is a leading tissue engineering approach in regenerative medicine. Achieving consistent cell seeding and uniform cell distribution throughout 3D scaffold culture in vitro is an ongoing challenge. Traditionally, 3D scaffolds are cultured within tissue culture plates to enable reproducible cell seeding and ease of culture media change. In this study, we compared two different well-plates with different surface properties to assess whether seeding efficiencies and cell growth on 3D scaffolds were affected. Cell attachment and growth of murine calvarial osteoblast (MC3T3-E1) cells within a melt-electrospun poly-ε-caprolactone scaffold were assessed when cultured in either "low-adhesive" non-treated or corona discharged-treated well-plates. Increased cell adhesion was observed on the scaffold placed in the surface treated culture plates compared to the scaffold in the non-treated plates 24 h after seeding, although it was not significant. However, higher cell metabolic activity was observed on the bases of all well-plates than on the scaffold, except for day 21, well metabolic activity was higher in the scaffold contained in non-treated plate than the base. These results indicate that there is no advantage in using non-treated plates to improve initial cell seeding in 3D polymeric tissue engineering scaffolds, however non-treated plates may provide an improved metabolic environment for long-term studies.Entities:
Keywords: 3D scaffolds; cell attachment; poly-ε-caprolactone; tissue engineering
Year: 2015 PMID: 26703748 PMCID: PMC4695910 DOI: 10.3390/jfb6041054
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Funct Biomater ISSN: 2079-4983
Figure 1Assessment of melt electrospun poly-ε-caprolactone (PCL)-scaffolds. (a) Photograph of 10 mm × 10 mm square of melt-electrospun PCL-scaffold; (b) High resolution micrograph demonstrating ordered 0–90° laydown pattern achieved with melt-electrospinning; (c) Representative image of the cell culture set-up of MC3T3-E1 cell-seeded scaffolds in multi-well plates; (d) Representative confocal laser scanning micrograph of MC3T3-E1 cells adhering to PCL-scaffold. Red: Alexa-Fluor 568 Phalloidin conjugates (actin), blue: DAPI (nuclei). Scale bars as shown.
Figure 2Quantitative analysis of cell growth and proliferation on melt-electrospun scaffolds when cultured in treated versus non-treated tissue culture multi-well plates. (a) A higher level of metabolic activity as assessed by MTT was detected on day 21; (b) No difference in total DNA content is observed via the PicoGreen® assay; (c,d) MTT assay shows no significant difference in scaffold-based cell proliferation between multi-well plates for day 1, 7 and 14, but an increased cell metabolic activity in scaffolds kept in the non-treated multi-well plate at day 21 (a); (c–e) MTT assay shows a significantly higher cell metabolic activity of bottom-based cells compared to scaffold-based cells at day 1, 7 and 14. Significance was calculated using unpaired 2-tailed student’s t-test. Results are presented as mean with SEM. ** indicates p < 0.005.