| Literature DB >> 27478033 |
Daniela Cigognini1,2, Diana Gaspar1,2, Pramod Kumar1,2, Abhigyan Satyam1,2, Senthilkumar Alagesan3, Clara Sanz-Nogués3, Matthew Griffin3, Timothy O'Brien2,3, Abhay Pandit2, Dimitrios I Zeugolis1,2.
Abstract
Modular tissue engineering is based on the cells' innate ability to create bottom-up supramolecular assemblies with efficiency and efficacy still unmatched by man-made devices. Although the regenerative potential of such tissue substitutes has been documented in preclinical and clinical setting, the prolonged culture time required to develop an implantable device is associated with phenotypic drift and/or cell senescence. Herein, we demonstrate that macromolecular crowding significantly enhances extracellular matrix deposition in human bone marrow mesenchymal stem cell culture at both 20% and 2% oxygen tension. Although hypoxia inducible factor - 1α was activated at 2% oxygen tension, increased extracellular matrix synthesis was not observed. The expression of surface markers and transcription factors was not affected as a function of oxygen tension and macromolecular crowding. The multilineage potential was also maintained, albeit adipogenic differentiation was significantly reduced in low oxygen tension cultures, chondrogenic differentiation was significantly increased in macromolecularly crowded cultures and osteogenic differentiation was not affected as a function of oxygen tension and macromolecular crowding. Collectively, these data pave the way for the development of bottom-up tissue equivalents based on physiologically relevant developmental processes.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27478033 PMCID: PMC4967872 DOI: 10.1038/srep30746
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Macromolecular crowding significantly accelerates extracellular matrix deposition in human bone marrow mesenchymal stem cell culture at both 20% and 2% oxygen tension.
Figure 2(A) SDS-PAGE analysis of cell layers at 2, 4, 7 and 14 days indicates that 100 μg/ml CR is the minimum effective concentration of CR for maximum ECM deposition. (B) Relative fluorescence intensity of immunofluorescence analysis for collagen type I, collagen type III, fibronectin and laminin further corroborates the observation that 100 μg/ml CR is the minimum effective concentration of CR for maximum ECM deposition. (C) Gelatine zymography of the cell layers reveals an increased MMP activity as a function of CR concentration. *Statistical significance from CTR at a given time point.
Figure 3(A) SDS-PAGE analysis of the cell layers indicates a significantly higher ECM deposition under MMC conditions at both oxygen tensions (20% and 2%) and time points (7 and 14 days), but no significant difference is apparent at low oxygen tension cultures. (B) Gelatin zymography of the cell layers reveals a significantly higher MMP activity under MMC conditions at both oxygen tensions (20% and 2%) and time points (7 and 14 days). (C) Relative fluorescence intensity of immunofluorescence analysis for collagen type I, collagen type III, fibronectin and laminin further corroborates the observation that MMC enhances ECM deposition at both oxygen tensions (20% and 2%) and time points (7 and 14 days). (D) Relative gene expression analysis of α1(I) procollagen and P4HA1 reveals no significant difference in their expression as a function of MMC and oxygen tension at both time points. (E) Immunocytochemistry analysis of HIF-1α reveals no significant difference between the MMC and non-MMC groups at both time points (7 and 14 days), whilst significantly higher HIF-1α expression is detectable for cells grown at 2% oxygen tension. Scale bar: 100 μm. *Statistical significance from CTR at a given time point and oxygen tension.
Figure 4(A) FACS analysis indicates no significant difference in surface marker expression as a function of oxygen tension (20% and 2%) and MMC. (B) FACS analysis indicates no significant difference in transcriptional factors expression as a function of oxygen tension (20% and 2%) and MMC. (C) Relative gene expression analysis shows no significant difference in OCT-4 (POUF-5) expression at both time points (7 and 14 days), independently of the oxygen tension (20% and 2%) and MMC.
Figure 5(A) Schematic illustration of the experimental design. (B) Adipogenic differentiation is significantly reduced in low oxygen tension cultures, independently of the presence or absence of CR. (C) Osteogenic differentiation was not affected as a function of oxygen tension and MMC. (D) Chondrogenesis was significantly increased under MMC conditions, but no difference was observed between 20% and 2% oxygen tension cultures. Scale bar: 100 μm. * Statistically significant.