Mechanical loading plays a major role in bone remodeling and fracture healing. Mimicking the concept of mechanical loading of bone has been widely studied in bone tissue engineering by perfusion cultures. Nevertheless, there is still debate regarding the in-vitro mechanical stimulation regime. This study aims at investigating the effect of two different flow rates (vlow = 0.001m/s and vhigh = 0.061m/s) on the growth of mineralized tissue produced by human mesenchymal stromal cells cultured on 3-D silk fibroin scaffolds. The flow rates applied were chosen to mimic the mechanical environment during early fracture healing or during bone remodeling, respectively. Scaffolds cultured under static conditions served as a control. Time-lapsed micro-computed tomography showed that mineralized extracellular matrix formation was completely inhibited at vlow compared to vhigh and the static group. Biochemical assays and histology confirmed these results and showed enhanced osteogenic differentiation at vhigh whereas the amount of DNA was increased at vlow. The biological response at vlow might correspond to the early stage of fracture healing, where cell proliferation and matrix production is prominent. Visual mapping of shear stresses, simulated by computational fluid dynamics, to 3-D micro-computed tomography data revealed that shear stresses up to 0.39mPa induced a higher DNA amount and shear stresses between 0.55mPa and 24mPa induced osteogenic differentiation. This study demonstrates the feasibility to drive cell behavior of human mesenchymal stromal cells by the flow velocity applied in agreement with mechanical loading mimicking early fracture healing (vlow) or bone remodeling (vhigh). These results can be used in the future to tightly control the behavior of human mesenchymal stromal cells towards proliferation or differentiation. Additionally, the combination of experiment and simulation presented is a strong tool to link biological responses to mechanical stimulation and can be applied to various in-vitro cultures to improve the understanding of the cause-effect relationship of mechanical loading.
a b s t r a c tAdipose-derived stromal cells (ASCs) are increasingly being used for orthopedic-based tissue engineering approaches due to their ability to readily undergo osteogenic differentiation. In the present study, we used in vitro and in vivo approaches to evaluate the use of ASCs as a treatment strategy for age-related osteoporosis. Molecular, histological and micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) based approaches confirmed that ASCs isolated from 18-week-old osteoporotic senescence-accelerated mice (SAMP6) were capable of undergoing osteogenesis when cultured in either silk fibroin (SF) scaffolds or scaffold-free microtissues (ASC-MT). A single intratibial injection of CM-Dil-labeled isogeneic ASCs or ASC-MT into SAMP6 recipients significantly improved trabecular bone quality after 6 weeks in comparison to untreated contralateral bones, as determined by micro-CT. Injected ASCs could be observed in paraffin wax bone sections at 24 h and 6 weeks post treatment and induced a significant increase in several molecular markers of bone turnover. Furthermore, a significant improvement in the osteogenic potential of osteoporotic patient-derived human bone marrow stromal cells (BMSCs) was observed when differentiated in conditioned culture media harvested from osteoporotic patient-derived human ASCs. These findings therefore support the use of ASCs as an autologous cell-based approach for the treatment of osteoporosis.
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