6533b7d6fe1ef96bd1267096

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Bioengineered human bone tissue using autogenous osteoblasts cultured on different biomatrices

H. PrintzL. GotzenA. RamaswamyL. KonradAlexander HofmannC. Hofmann

subject

Materials sciencemedicine.medical_treatmentBiomedical EngineeringEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent AssayBone healingBone graftingBiomaterialsTissue engineeringBone cellmedicineAnimalsHumansOsteopontinOsteoblastsTissue EngineeringbiologyOsteoblastExtracellular MatrixCell biologyBone morphogenetic protein 7Durapatitemedicine.anatomical_structureBone Morphogenetic ProteinsBone Substitutesbiology.proteinOsteocalcinBiomedical engineering

description

Surgical treatment of critical-size posttraumatic bone defects is still a challenging problem, even in modern bone and joint surgery. Progress in cellular and molecular biology during the last decade now permits novel approaches in bone engineering. Recent conceptual and technical advances have enabled the use of mitotically expanded, bone-derived cells as a therapeutic approach for tissue repair. Using three different tissue carrier systems, we successfully cultivated human osteoblasts in a newly developed perfusion chamber. We studied cell proliferation and the expression of osteocalcin, osteopontin, bone morphogenetic protein-2A, alkaline phosphatase, and vascular endothelial growth factor as parameters for osteoblast function and viability. Adherence of highly enriched human osteoblasts had already started after 1 h and resulted in completely overgrown human bone pieces after 10 days. Expression analysis of bone-specific alkaline phosphatase indicated differentiating osteoblasts, whereas the high mRNA expression of osteocalcin and osteopontin revealed terminally differentiated osteoblasts and the process of mineralization. Additionally, gene expression was significantly higher when demineralized bone was used as biomatrix, compared to autoclaved bone and hydroxyapatite ceramics. We conclude that with our newly developed perfusion culture system, vital autogenous bone implants of clinically applicable size can be generated within 17 days in order to manage critical-size bone defects. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res 67A: 191–199, 2003

https://doi.org/10.1002/jbm.a.10594