| Literature DB >> 29678192 |
Alessandro Pirosa1, Riccardo Gottardi1,2, Peter G Alexander1, Rocky S Tuan3.
Abstract
The production of veritable in-vitro models of bone tissue is essential to understand the biology of bone and its surrounding environment, to analyze the pathogenesis of bone diseases (e.g., osteoporosis, osteoarthritis, osteomyelitis, etc.), to develop effective therapeutic drug screening, and to test potential therapeutic strategies. Dysregulated interactions between vasculature and bone cells are often related to the aforementioned pathologies, underscoring the need for a bone model that contains engineered vasculature. Due to ethical restraints and limited prediction power of animal models, human stem cell-based tissue engineering has gained increasing relevance as a candidate approach to overcome the limitations of animals and to serve as preclinical models for drug testing. Since bone is a highly vascularized tissue, the concomitant development of vasculature and mineralized matrix requires a synergistic interaction between osteogenic and endothelial precursors. A number of experimental approaches have been used to achieve this goal, such as the combination of angiogenic factors and three-dimensional scaffolds, prevascularization strategies, and coculture systems. In this review, we present an overview of the current models and approaches to generate in-vitro stem cell-based vascularized bone, with emphasis on the main challenges of vasculature engineering. These challenges are related to the choice of biomaterials, scaffold fabrication techniques, and cells, as well as the type of culturing conditions required, and specifically the application of dynamic culture systems using bioreactors.Entities:
Keywords: biomaterial; bioreactors; preclinical model; scaffold; three-dimensional microphysiological systems; tissue engineering; vascularized bone
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29678192 PMCID: PMC5910611 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-018-0847-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Fig. 1Hierarchic structure of bone and bone tissue from macroscopic (a) to microscopic (b) to molecular (c) levels
Etiology, current treatments, and role of vasculature in the main pathologies affecting bone
| Etiology/risk factors | Current treatments | Role of vasculature | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Altered balance of bone remodeling: greater bone removal by osteoclasts and then production by osteoblasts [ | Administration of bisphosphonates, which shorten osteoclast life span and inhibit bone resorption [ | Possible link between decreased production of vasodilator molecules by endothelial cells and increased bone loss [ | |
| Traumatic, congenital, postoperative, metabolic, endocrine; age, joint overuse, obesity are common risk factors [ | Symptomatic treatments through physiotherapy, orthopedic aids and orthoses, pharmacotherapy, total joint replacement [ | Increased vascularization and neoangiogenesis in the joint; increase in VEGF level in osteoarthritic chondrocytes [ | |
| Infection by | Parenteral course of broad-spectrum antibiotics and surgical debridement[ | Poor vascularity can cause both development of the infection and resistance to antibiotics [ | |
| Inadequate vascular supply to the bone; long-term steroid treatment, alcohol abuse, joint injury, arthritis, cancer are common risk factors [ | Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs to reduce pain and inflammation; bone surgery, grafting, and joint replacement [ | Compromised subchondral microcirculation, vascular interruption, intravascular occlusion, and extravascular compression [ | |
| Mainly trauma; osteoporosis, low mineral density, age, tumors are common risk factors [ | Fracture reduction and immobilization; bone autograft, allograft, or synthetic materials [ | Vascular supply is critical for fracture healing; VEGF treatment can enhance fracture repair [ | |
| Occurring mostly in the medullary cavity of long bones: environmental factors, chromosomal abnormalities, p53 mutation are common risk factors [ | Depending on the stage, chemotherapy, radiation therapy, surgery (amputation, grafting, local excision) [ | Vasculature is critical for tumor survival, osteosarcoma generally involves downregulation of anti-angiogenic factors [ |
VEGF vascular endothelial growth factor
Fig. 2Vascularization strategies for engineered bone constructs. a Scaffold loading with proangiogenic factors in-vivo. b Scaffold preseeding with ECs in-vivo. c Coculture strategy more suitable for in-vitro studies
Fig. 3a Cross-sectional bioreactor schematic. b Macroscopic and histological analysis of engineered osteochondral interface. c Live/dead staining of capillary-like network formed by HUVECs in bone compartment (GFP, green = HUVEC; Calcein Blue AM, blue = live cells; EthD-1, red = dead cells). gelMA gelatin methacrylate, PCL poly(ε-caprolactone), GFP green fluorescent protein, EthD-1 ethidium homodimer-1
Major scaffolds and fabrication technologies used in bone engineering
| Type of scaffold | Fabrication techniques | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biologically inspired | Decellularized bone [ | Pros: mimicking bone microenvironment; interconnected porosity for vasculature introduction; osteoinduction and osteoconduction; biomechanical properties | Conventional techniques | Solvent casting/particulate leaching, gas foaming [ | Pros: ability to generate interconnected porous scaffolds; porosity and pore size can be controlled by altering particle concentration and size or gas concentration |
| Cons: difficulty to obtain clinically relevant volumes; specialized perfused apparatus for decellularization; challenge of generating specific anatomical shapes | Cons: inability to produce thick constructs; pore shape and interconnection cannot be controlled | ||||
| Extracellular matrix [ | Pros: promote the migration and proliferation of progenitor cells; provide molecules for cell–matrix interactions; provide a structure for mechanotransduction signals | Phase separation [ | Pros: incorporation of biomolecules within the structure due to mild processing conditions; scaffold customization by altering material and concentration, phase transitions, and/or solvents | ||
| Cons: challenge to minimally disturb biochemical and mechanical properties of the ECM during decellularization; inhomogeneous distribution during cell seeding | Cons: limited material selection and inadequate resolution | ||||
| Natural/synthetic materials-based scaffolds | Natural polymers [ | Pros: inherent biocompatibility and bioactivity; can be modified to provide a wide variety of original features; renewability | Additive manufacturing | Selective laser sintering, 3D printing [ | Pros: control over scaffold internal and external morphology; high production rate; ability to produce large-size scaffolds |
| Cons: insufficient mechanical properties; challenge in generating specific morphologies due to poor processing conditions | Cons: laser intensity can induce scaffold degradation; generally low mechanical properties; limited and high-cost materials; high roughness of scaffold’s surface; trapped material inside the scaffold | ||||
| Natural ceramics (β-TCP, HA, bioactive glass) [ | Pros: capability to form direct bonds with living bone; osteoinduction and osteoconduction | Fused deposition modeling, computer-aided wet-spinning [ | Pros: control over scaffold internal and external morphology, pore size, distribution, and interconnection; good mechanical properties; no material trapped in the scaffold | ||
| Cons: brittleness, difficulty of shaping | |||||
| Synthetic polymers [ | Pros: high versatility regarding control over physical–chemical properties and morphology; easy processability; batch-to-batch reproducibility | Cons: relative regular structures; resolution dependent on the utilized machine | |||
| Cons: lack of important biomolecules aiding cell attachment; may degrade into unfavorable products, such as acids | Bioprinting [ | Pros: geometry and dimension of the cell-laden construct can be controlled by automated process; nonelevated temperatures required | |||
| Cons: careful attention to cell viability, densities, and ratios during and after printing; printability of the selected bioink material | |||||
ECM extracellular matrix, TCP tricalcium phosphate, HA hydroxyapatite
Fig. 4Primary cellular interactions between ECs, osteoblasts, and osteoclasts in production of vascularized bone. VEGF vascular endothelial growth factor, bFGF basic fibroblast growth factor, IL interleukin, CSF colony-stimulating factor, BMP bone morphogenetic protein, IGF insulin-like growth factor, MCP-1 monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, SDF stromal cell-derived factor-1, RANKL receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa-Β ligand, OSCAR osteoclast-associated receptor
Main strategies of coculturing osteogenic and vascular precursors for vascularized bone engineering
| Medium composition | Cell ratio (O:V) | Seeding methodology | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Osteogenic/vascular [ | 1:1 [ | Simultaneous seeding [ | |
| Expansion/vascular [ | 1:4 [ | Pros: technically simpler; even mix distribution within the construct; cell–cell crosstalk during differentiation | Cons: risk of suboptimal individual cell type viability and differentiation |
| Osteogenic [ | 2:1 [ | Sequential seeding [ | |
| Expansion [ | 4:1 [ | Pros: optimal differentiation of the first seeded cells; cell–cell communication | Cons: uneven distribution of the two types of cells within the construct |
| Vascular [ | 5:1 [ | Independent differentiation [ | |
| Osteogenic with vascular growth factors [ | 8:1 [ | Pros: optimal differentiation of each cell type in their respective medium | Cons: lack of cell–cell communication |
| 3:2 [ | |||
O osteogenic, V vascular, Expansion expansion medium for osteogenic precursors
Fig. 5Schematic of main bioreactors used for production of 3D constructs for TE applications: a spinner flask, b rotating wall vessel, c perfusion, and d in-vivo bioreactor