| Literature DB >> 32195229 |
Ziyu Liu1, Maryam Tamaddon1, Yingying Gu1, Jianshu Yu1, Nan Xu2,3, Fangli Gang2,3, Xiaodan Sun2,3, Chaozong Liu1.
Abstract
Cell attachment to a scaffold is a significant step toward successful tissue engineering. Cell seeding is the first stage of cell attachment, and its efficiency and distribution can affect the final biological performance of the scaffold. One of the contributing factors to maximize cell seeding efficiency and consequently cell attachment is the design of the scaffold. In this study, we investigated the optimum scaffold structure using two designs - truncated octahedron (TO) structure and cubic structure - for cell attachment. A simulation approach, by ANSYS Fluent coupling the volume of fluid (VOF) model, discrete phase model (DPM), and cell impingement model (CIM), was developed for cell seeding process in scaffold, and the results were validated with in vitro cell culture assays. Our observations suggest that both designs showed a gradual lateral variation of attached cells, and live cell movements are extremely slow by diffusion only while dead cells cannot move without external force. The simulation approaches supply a more accurate model to simulate cell adhesion for three-dimensional structures. As the initial stages of cell attachment in vivo are hard to observe, this novel method provides an opportunity to predict cell distribution, thereby helping to optimize scaffold structures. As tissue formation is highly related to cell distribution, this model may help researchers predict the effect of applied scaffold and reduce the number of animal testing.Entities:
Keywords: DPM model; cell distribution; cell seeding; scaffold; simulation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32195229 PMCID: PMC7064471 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2020.00104
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
The chemical composition of EOS Titanium Ti64 powder (EOS art. no. 9011-0014).
| % | Al | V | O | N | C | H | Fe | Ti |
| Normal value | 5–6.75 | 3.5–4.5 | <0.2 | <0.05 | <0.08 | <0.015 | <0.3 | Balance |
FIGURE 1Cubic and truncated octahedron structures were used for titanium scaffold structure [(A) Unit cell; (B) scaffold].
FIGURE 2Illustration of test and simulation framework.
FIGURE 3CIM model and impinge regimes definition.
Geometry parameters of scaffolds.
| V (mm3) | S (mm2) | Porosity | Maximum pore length of side (μm) | Maximum pore diagonal length (μm) | Specific surface area | |
| Truncated octahedron | 60.54 | 1541.67 | 83.81% | 240 | 480 | 25.47 |
| Cubic design | 72.65 | 598.40 | 80.57% | 1000 | 1414 | 8.24 |
FIGURE 4Cells growth on porous titanium matrix was examined by confocal microscopy, and the confocal image was further processed to determine the cells distribution.
FIGURE 5Attached cell numbers at the top surface of scaffolds [(A) 6 h on cubic scaffold; (B) 12 h on cubic scaffold; (C) 6 h on TO scaffold; (D) 12 h on TO scaffold; (E) cell distribution analysis at 6 h on cubic scaffold; (F) cell distribution analysis at 6 h on TO scaffold; (G) alive and dead cells on cubic scaffold all timeline; (H) alive and dead cells on TO scaffold all timeline]; n = 3 for each scaffold; error bars show standard deviation.
FIGURE 6Predicted cell distribution during cell seeding process. From left to right represent the cells distribution at second one, two, three, four, five and six, respectively.
FIGURE 7Predicted attached cell mass at second 3, 4 and 5 during cell seeding process. Top row: cubic design; Bottom row for truncated octahedron design.
FIGURE 8Variation of calculated attached cell mass during sell seeding process.
FIGURE 9The predicted cell distributions in the scaffold are in line with the experimental results as confirmed by confocal examinations (6 and 12 hours time points).