357 research outputs found
Translation of biomaterials from bench to clinic
Scientific research originates from curiosity and interests. Translational research of biomaterials should always focus on addressing specific needs of the targeted clinical applications. The guest editors of this special issue hope that the included articles have provided cutting-edge biomaterials research as well as insights of the translation of biomaterials from bench to clinic.(undefined
Influence of the porosity of starch-based fiber mesh scaffolds on the proliferation and osteogenic differentiation of bone marrow stromal cells cultured in a flow perfusion bioreactor
This study investigates the influence of the porosity of fiber mesh scaffolds obtained from a blend
of starch and poly(!-caprolactone) on the proliferation and osteogenic differentiation of marrow
stromal cells cultured under static and flow perfusion conditions. For this purpose, biodegradable
scaffolds were fabricated by a fiber bonding method into mesh structures with two different porositiesâ
50 and 75%. These scaffolds were then seeded with marrow stromal cells harvested from Wistar
rats and cultured in a flow perfusion bioreactor or in 6-well plates for up to 15 days. Scaffolds
of 75% porosity demonstrated significantly enhanced cell proliferation under both static and flow
perfusion culture conditions. The expression of alkaline phosphatase activity was higher in flow cultures,
but only for cells cultured onto the higher porosity scaffolds. Calcium deposition patterns
were similar for both scaffolds, showing a significant enhancement of calcium deposition on cellscaffold
constructs cultured under flow perfusion, as compared to static cultures. Calcium deposition
was higher in scaffolds of 75% porosity, but this difference was not statistically significant. Observation
by scanning electron microscopy showed the formation of pore-like structures within the
extracellular matrix deposited on the higher porosity scaffolds. Fourier transformed infrared spectroscopy
with attenuated total reflectance and thin-film X-ray diffraction analysis of the cell-scaffold
constructs after 15 days of culture in a flow perfusion bioreactor revealed the presence of a
mineralized matrix similar to bone. These findings indicate that starch-based scaffolds, in conjunction
with fluid flow bioreactor culture, minimize diffusion constraints and provide mechanical stimulation
to the marrow stromal cells, leading to enhancement of differentiation toward development
of bone-like mineralized tissue. These results also demonstrate that the scaffold structure, namely,
the porosity, influences the sequential development of osteoblastic cells and, in combination
A rapid, flexible method for incorporating controlled antibiotic release into porous polymethylmethacrylate space maintainers for craniofacial reconstruction
Severe injuries in the craniofacial complex, resulting from trauma or pathology, present several challenges to functional and aesthetic reconstruction. The anatomy and position of the craniofacial region make it vulnerable to injury and subsequent local infection due to external bacteria as well as those from neighbouring structures like the sinuses, nasal passages, and mouth. Porous polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) âspace maintainersâ have proven useful in staged craniofacial reconstruction by promoting healing of overlying soft tissue prior to reconstruction of craniofacial bones. We describe herein a method by which the porosity of a prefabricated porous PMMA space maintainer, generated by porogen leaching, can be loaded with a thermogelling copolymer-based drug delivery system. Porogen leaching, space maintainer prewetting, and thermogel loading all significantly affected the loading of a model antibiotic, colistin. Weeks-long release of antibiotic at clinically relevant levels was achieved with several formulations. In vitro assays confirmed that the released colistin maintained its antibiotic activity against several bacterial targets. Our results suggest that this method is a valuable tool in the development of novel therapeutic approaches for the treatment of severe complex, infected craniofacial injuries
In vitro localization of bone growth factors in constructs of biodegradable scaffolds seeded with marrow stromal cells and cultured in a flow perfusion bioreactor
Tissue engineering strategies aim at controlling the behavior of individual cells to stimulate tissue
formation. This control is achieved by mimicking signals that manage natural tissue development
or repair. Flow perfusion bioreactors that create culture environments with minimal diffusion constraints
and provide cells with mechanical stimulation may closely resemble in vivo conditions for
bone formation. Therefore, these culturing systems, in conjunction with an appropriate scaffold and
cell type, may provide significant insight towards the development of in vitro tissue engineering models
leading to improved strategies for the construction of bone tissue substitutes. The objective of
this study was to investigate the in vitro localization of several bone growth factors that are usually
associated with bone formation in vivo by culturing rat bone marrow stromal cells seeded onto
starch-based biodegradable fiber meshes in a flow perfusion bioreactor. The localization of several
bone-related growth factorsânamely, transforming growth factor-!1, platelet-derived growth factor-
A, fibroblast growth factor-2, vascular endothelial growth factor, and bone morphogenetic protein-
2âwas determined at two different time points in scaffolds cultured under perfusion conditions
at two different flow rates using an immunohistochemistry technique. The results show the presence
of regions positively stained for all the growth factors considered, except platelet-derived growth
factor-A. Furthermore, the images obtained from the positively stained sections suggest an increase
in the immunohistochemically stained area at the higher flow rate and culture time. These observations
demonstrate that flow perfusion augments the functionality of scaffold/cell constructs grown
in vitro as it combines both biological and mechanical factors to enhance cell differentiation and cell
organization within the construct. This study also shows that flow perfusion bioreactor culture of
marrow stromal cells, combined with the use of appropriate biodegradable fiber meshes, may constitute
a useful model to study bone formation and assess bone tissue engineering strategies in vitro
Responsive and In situ-forming chitosan scaffolds for bone tissue engineering applications : an overview of the last decade
The use of bioabsorbable polymeric scaffolds is being investigated for use in bone tissue engineering applications, as their properties can be tailored to allow them to degrade and integrate at optimal rates as bone remodelling is completed. The main goal of this review is to highlight the âintelligentâ properties exhibited by chitosan scaffolds and their use in the bone tissue engineering field. To complement the fast evolution of the bone tissue engineering field, it is important to propose the use of responsive scaffolds and take advantage of bioinspired materials and their properties as emerging technologies. There is a growing interest and need for new biomaterials, such as âsmartâ/responsive materials with the capability to respond to changes in the in vivo environment. This review will provide an overview of strategies that can modulate bone tissue regeneration by using in situ-forming scaffolds
Design of a High-Throughput Flow Perfusion Bioreactor System for Tissue Engineering
Flow perfusion culture is used in many areas of tissue engineering and offers several key advantages. However,
one challenge to these cultures is the relatively low-throughput nature of perfusion bioreactors. Here, a flow
perfusion bioreactor with increased throughput was designed and built for tissue engineering. This design uses
an integrated medium reservoir and flow chamber in order to increase the throughput, limit the volume of
medium required to operate the system, and simplify the assembly and operation
Natural stimulus responsive scaffolds/cells for bone tissue engineering : influence of lysozyme upon scaffold degradation and osteogenic differentiation of cultured marrow stromal cells induced by CaP coatings
This work proposes the use of nonporous, smart, and stimulus responsive chitosan-based scaffolds for bone
tissue engineering applications. The overall vision is to use biodegradable scaffolds based on chitosan and starch
that present properties that will be regulated by bone regeneration, with the capability of gradual in situ pore
formation. Biomimetic calcium phosphate (CaP) coatings were used as a strategy to incorporate lysozyme at the
surface of chitosan-based materials with the main objective of controlling and tailoring their degradation profile
as a function of immersion time. To confirm the concept, degradation tests with a lysozyme concentration similar
to that incorporated into CaP chitosan-based scaffolds were used to study the degradation of the scaffolds and
the formation of pores as a function of immersion time. Degradation studies with lysozyme (1.5 g=L) showed the
formation of pores, indicating an increase of porosity (*5â55% up to 21 days) resulting in porous threedimensional
structures with interconnected pores. Additional studies investigated the influence of a CaP
biomimetic coating on osteogenic differentiation of rat marrow stromal cells (MSCs) and showed enhanced
differentiation of rat MSCs seeded on the CaP-coated chitosan-based scaffolds with lysozyme incorporated.
At all culture times, CaP-coated chitosan-based scaffolds with incorporated lysozyme demonstrated greater
osteogenic differentiation of MSCs, bone matrix production, and mineralization as demonstrated by calcium
deposition measurements, compared with controls (uncoated scaffolds). The ability of these CaP-coated
chitosan-based scaffolds with incorporated lysozyme to create an interconnected pore network in situ coupled
with the demonstrated positive effect of these scaffolds upon osteogenic differentiation of MSCs and mineralized
matrix production illustrates the strong potential of these scaffolds for application in bone tissue engineering
strategies.The authors would like to acknowledge Dr. Serena Danti. This work was supported by the European NoE EX-PERTISSUES (NMP3-CT-2004-500283), the European STREP HIPPOCRATES (NMP3-CT-2003-505758), and the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) through POCTI and/or FEDER programs. This work was also supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH; R01 DE15164) (A. G. M.) and a Bioengineering Research Partnership with the Baylor College of Medicine through the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIH Grant 5 R01 EB005173-02). F. K. K. is supported by a training fellowship from the Keck Center Nanobiology Training Program of the Gulf Coast Consortia (NIH Grant 5 T90 DK070121-03)
"Smart'' and stimulus responsive chitosan-based scaffolds/cells for bone tissue engineering: Influence of lysozyme upon scaffold degradation and osteogenic differentiation of cultured marrow stromal cells induced by cap coatings
[Excerpt] The present study reports the use of non-porous, ââsmartââ and stimulus responsive chitosan-based scaffolds with the capability of gradual in situ pore formation for bone tissue engineering applications.
Biomimetic calcium phosphate (CaP) coatings were used as a strategy to incorporate lysozyme at the surface of chitosan based materials the main objective of controlling their degradation profile as a function of immersion time. In order to confirm the concept, degradation tests with concentration similar to those incorporated into CaP chitosan-based scaffolds were used to study the degradation of the scaffolds and the formation of pores as function of immersion time. Degradation studies with lysozyme (1.5 g/L)
showed the formation of pores, indicating an increase of porosity (~5% - 55% up to 21 days) resulting in porous 3-D structures with interconnected pores. [âŠ]info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Tensile Fracture of Welded Polymer Interfaces: Miscibility, Entanglements and Crazing
Large-scale molecular simulations are performed to investigate tensile
failure of polymer interfaces as a function of welding time . Changes in the
tensile stress, mode of failure and interfacial fracture energy are
correlated to changes in the interfacial entanglements as determined from
Primitive Path Analysis. Bulk polymers fail through craze formation, followed
by craze breakdown through chain scission. At small welded interfaces are
not strong enough to support craze formation and fail at small strains through
chain pullout at the interface. Once chains have formed an average of about one
entanglement across the interface, a stable craze is formed throughout the
sample. The failure stress of the craze rises with welding time and the mode of
craze breakdown changes from chain pullout to chain scission as the interface
approaches bulk strength. The interfacial fracture energy is calculated
by coupling the simulation results to a continuum fracture mechanics model. As
in experiment, increases as before saturating at the average
bulk fracture energy . As in previous simulations of shear strength,
saturation coincides with the recovery of the bulk entanglement density. Before
saturation, is proportional to the areal density of interfacial
entanglements. Immiscibiltiy limits interdiffusion and thus suppresses
entanglements at the interface. Even small degrees of immisciblity reduce
interfacial entanglements enough that failure occurs by chain pullout and
Osteochondral tissue regeneration through polymeric delivery of DNA encoding for the SOX trio and RUNX2
Native osteochondral repair is often inadequate owing to the inherent properties of the tissue, and current clinical repair strategies can result in healing with a limited lifespan and donor site morbidity. This work investigates the use of polymeric gene therapy to address this problem by delivering DNA encoding for transcription factors complexed with the branched poly(ethylenimine)âhyaluronic acid (bPEIâHA) delivery vector via a porous oligo[poly(ethylene glycol) fumarate] hydrogel scaffold. To evaluate the potential of this approach, a bilayered scaffold mimicking native osteochondral tissue organization was loaded with DNA/bPEIâHA complexes. Next, bilayered implants either unloaded or loaded in a spatial fashion with bPEIâHA and DNA encoding for either Runt-related transcription factor 2 (RUNX2) or SRY (sex determining region Y)-box 5, 6, and 9 (the SOX trio), to generate bone and cartilage tissues respectively, were fabricated and implanted in a rat osteochondral defect. At 6Â weeks post-implantation, micro-computed tomography analysis and histological scoring were performed on the explants to evaluate the quality and quantity of tissue repair in each group. The incorporation of DNA encoding for RUNX2 in the bone layer of these scaffolds significantly increased bone growth. Additionally, a spatially loaded combination of RUNX2 and SOX trio DNA loading significantly improved healing relative to empty hydrogels or either factor alone. Finally, the results of this study suggest that subchondral bone formation is necessary for correct cartilage healing
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