2010
DOI: 10.1089/ten.tea.2009.0345
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Osteoblast Response to Rest Periods During Bioreactor Culture of Collagen–Glycosaminoglycan Scaffolds

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Cited by 43 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…Additionally, the procedures involved in the preparation of biocompatible scaffolds, such as blending, freeze-drying, and dehydrothermal cross-linking, may alter the conformation of proteins present, reducing potential integrin-ligand interactions. Experimental evidence corroborating this can been seen from published studies; Jaasma and O'Brien, 74 Partap et al, 75 and Plunkett et al 76 all experienced 40%-50% cell loss at shear forces two to four orders of magnitude (8Â10 À4 to 2Â10 À2 Pa) below the lowest seen in 2D experiments for a 49 h time frame.…”
Section: 71supporting
confidence: 65%
“…Additionally, the procedures involved in the preparation of biocompatible scaffolds, such as blending, freeze-drying, and dehydrothermal cross-linking, may alter the conformation of proteins present, reducing potential integrin-ligand interactions. Experimental evidence corroborating this can been seen from published studies; Jaasma and O'Brien, 74 Partap et al, 75 and Plunkett et al 76 all experienced 40%-50% cell loss at shear forces two to four orders of magnitude (8Â10 À4 to 2Â10 À2 Pa) below the lowest seen in 2D experiments for a 49 h time frame.…”
Section: 71supporting
confidence: 65%
“…Cells have non-uniform attachment lengths or orientations to the direction of flow, with larger cells and orientations more normal to the direction of flow resulting in greater levels of cell deformation. Computational modelling has shown that bridged cells experience up to 500 fold greater levels of cytoskeletal deformation than flat cells (Jungreuthmayer et al, 2009b) under flow conditions that have been shown to promote osteogenic differentiation, but cause cell detachment from the scaffold (Alvarez-Barreto and Cartmell, S. et al, 2003;Partap et al, 2009;Plunkett et al, 2010). We hypothesised the greater levels of cell deformation experienced by bridging cells is the primary contributing factor to cell detachment observed in cell-seeded scaffolds undergoing flow perfusion.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Therefore, in-vitro bone tissue cultivation strategies have sought to enhance the osteogenic differentiation of cell-seeded constructs by employing mechanical stimulation via flow-perfusion (Bancroft et al, 2002;Cartmell, S. et al, 2003;Keogh et al, 2011;Sikavitsas et al, 2003;Sikavitsas et al, 2005;Vance et al, 2005). We have successfully employed an in-house designed perfusion bioreactor to examine the effects of mechanical stimulation on gene expression levels of key osteogenic markers for MC3T3 (pre-osteoblasts) cell-seeded collagen-GAG (CG) scaffolds subjected to a range of fluid flow regimes and for exposure times of 1h to 14 days Partap et al, 2009;Plunkett et al, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…We agree with the reviewer that the application of shear stress might have beneficial effect on vasculogenesis. Ongoing research in our laboratory is using a flow perfusion bioreactor to provide a biophysical environment to enhance osteogenesis and vasculogenesis (see for example Plunkett et al, 2010). However, we feel that these types of experiments are beyond the scope of the current www.ecmjournal.org GP Duffy et al Pre-vascularisation of collagen-GAG scaffold study and the inclusion of any bioreactor data would detract from the focus of the current paper.…”
Section: Discussion With Reviewersmentioning
confidence: 98%