2008 Annual Meeting
(579c) Mineralized Extracellular Matrix Constructs Support the Osteogenic Differentiation of Mesenchymal Stem Cells In Vitro
Authors
MSCs were harvested from the femora and tibiae of rats, expanded in osteogenic medium supplemented with dexamethasone for 6 days, seeded onto electrospun PCL fiber mesh scaffolds, and then cultured statically for 12 days in osteogenic medium supplemented with dexamethasone to produce mineralized bone-like extracellular matrix constructs. These constructs were then decellularized, seeded with freshly harvested and expanded MSCs, and cultured statically for 4, 8 and 16 days in osteogenic medium either with or without dexamethasone supplementation. MSCs were cultured in parallel on plain PCL scaffolds. Additionally, acellular PCL/ECM constructs were cultured in osteogenic medium supplemented with dexamethasone as a control. Following culture, the cellularity, alkaline phosphatase activity, and calcium content of scaffolds from each group were assessed.
This study demonstrates that MSCs cultured on PCL scaffolds in the presence of dexamethasone produce mineralized extracellular matrix constructs that direct the osteogenic differentiation of and mineral deposition by MSCs. Additionally, the PCL/ECM constructs support the osteogenic differentiation of MSCs (previously expanded in medium supplemented with dexamethasone), even in the absence of dexamethasone from the secondary culture medium. Finally, acellular PCL/ECM constructs alone induce mineral deposition from the culture medium. These novel bioactive mineralized constructs present tremendous potential for application as cell transplantation vehicles or as acellular scaffolds for bone tissue regeneration.