| Literature DB >> 29340024 |
Shengqi Zang1, Lei Zhu2, Kefu Luo3, Rui Mu1,4, Feng Chen1, Xiaocui Wei1,4, Xiaodong Yan1, Biyao Han4, Xiaolei Shi1, Qintao Wang5, Lei Jin1,4.
Abstract
<span class="Chemical">The study aimed to develop a <span class="Chemical">chitosan (CS)-based scaffold for repairing calvarial bone defects. We fabricated composite scaffolds made of CS and bovine-derived xenograft (BDX), characterized their physicochemical properties including pore size and porosity, absorption, degradation, and compressive strength, compared their efficacy to support in vitro proliferation and differentiation of human jaw bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (hJBMMSCs), and evaluated their bone regeneration capacity in critical-size rat calvarial defects. The CS/BDX (mass ratio of 40:60) composite scaffold with porosity of 46.23% and pore size of 98.23 μm exhibited significantly enhanced compressive strength than the CS scaffold (59.33 ± 4.29 vs. 18.82 ± 2.49 Kpa). The CS/BDX (40:60) scaffold induced better cell attachment and promoted more osteogenic differentiation of hJBMMSCs than the CS scaffold. The CS/BDX (40:60) scaffold seeded with hJBMMSCs was the most effective in supporting new bone formation, as evidenced by better histomorphometry results, larger new bone area, and more obvious mature lamellar bone formation compared to other groups in rat calvarial defects 8 weeks after implantation. These results suggest that CS/BDX composite scaffold combining with hJBMMSCs has the potential for bone defect regeneration.Entities:
Keywords: bioscaffold; bovine-derived xenograft; calvarial defect; chitosan; tissue engineering
Year: 2017 PMID: 29340024 PMCID: PMC5762292 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.22917
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1(A) SEM photomicrographs of the morphological structure of the scaffolds. (B) Degradation of the scaffolds over a 28-day time period. Four types of scaffolds fabricated at mass ratios of CS to BDX of 100:0, 70:30, 40:60, and 10:90, respectively, were evaluated. Data are shown as means ± SD with significance at *P < 0.05.
Physicochemical properties of CS-based scaffolds fabricated with different mass ratio of CS to BDX
| Scaffold type | Pore size (μm) | Porosity (%) | Water absorption (%) | Compressive strength (KPa) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CS | 164.61 ± 39.32* | 72.24 ± 8.13* | 80.43 ± 6.54* | 18.82 ± 2.49* |
| CS/BDX (70:30) | 108.92 ± 22.36# | 53.40 ± 7.19# | 59.03 ± 7.37# | 37.47 ± 5.78# |
| CS/BDX (40:60) | 98.23 ± 25.53# | 46.23 ± 9.89# | 52.73 ± 5.16# | 59.33 ± 4.29 |
| CS/BDX (10:90) | 62.15 ± 19.03 | 16.10 ± 6.30 | 19.70 ± 7.33 | 64.21 ± 5.20 |
*P < 0.05 compared with the CS/BDX (10:90), CS/BDX (40:60), and CS/BDX (70:30) groups.
#P < 0.05 compared with the CS/BDX (10:90) group.
Figure 2hJBMMSCs characterization and in vitro evaluation of hJBMMSCs on CS-based scaffolds
(A) Morphology of hJBMMSCs at the first passage (scale bars = 50 mm). (B) Osteogenic differentiation of hJBMMSCs using Alizarin Red S staining (red color, scale bars = 50 mm). (C) Adipogenic differentiation of hJBMMSCs using Oil Red staining (red color, scale bars = 50 mm). (D) Flow cytometry profile of hJBMMSCs. (E) SEM photomicrographs of hJBMMSCs-seeded scaffolds after 3 days culture. (F) Confocal images of hJBMMSCs with dual staining of DAPI for nuclei (blue color) and phalloidin for F-actin (red color). (G) OD measurement of cell viability of hJBMMSCs on different scaffolds, cultured for 1 to 7 days. (H) Osteogenic gene expression of hJBMMSCs on different scaffolds, cultured in osteogenic induction medium at day 14. (I) OD measurement of ALP activity of hJBMMSCs on different scaffolds, cultured in osteogenic induction medium and standard medium at day 1, 3, 7, and 14. Data are shown as means ± SD with significance at *P < 0.05.
Figure 6Schematic diagram of experiment design
(A) Scaffold fabrication. (B) Cell harvest and culture, and scaffold implantation in rat model of calvarial defects.
Figure 3(A) Sagittal and coronal 2-dimension micro-CT scan images and 3-dimension reconstructed micro-CT images of critical-size circular calvarial defects 8 weeks after scaffold implantation. (B) Bone histomorphometry based on micro-CT images, including bone volume (BV/TV), trabecular thickness (Tb.Th), trabecular separation/spacing (Tb.Sp) and trabecular number (Tb.N). Data are shown as means ± SD with significance at *P < 0.05.
Figure 4Histological photomicrographs (original magnification ×25 and ×100) with hematoxylin-eosin staining (A–L) and with Masson’s trichrome staining (a–l) of critical-size circular calvarial defects 8 weeks after scaffold implantation. Green arrow shows location of residual CS and yellow arrow shows location of residual BDX. (M) Histometric analysis of new bone area of defects 8 weeks after scaffold implantation. Data are shown as means ± SD with significance at *P < 0.05.
Figure 5Immunohistochemical staining (brown stain, original magnification ×400) of osteocalcin in critical-size circular calvarial defects 8 weeks after scaffold implantation