4.7 Article

Heparin-Conjugated Decellularized Bone Particles Promote Enhanced Osteogenic Signaling of PDGF-BB to Adipose-Derived Stem Cells in Tissue Engineered Bone Grafts

Journal

ADVANCED HEALTHCARE MATERIALS
Volume 8, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/adhm.201801565

Keywords

adipose-derived stem cells; bone extracellular matrix; bone tissue engineering; growth factor delivery; platelet-derived growth factors

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship
  2. Maryland Stem Cell Research Fund [2014-MSCRFI-0699]
  3. NIH P30 Grant [EY001765]

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Adipose-derived stem cells (ASCs) are a promising cell source for regenerating critical-sized craniofacial bone defects, but their clinical use is limited due to the supraphysiological levels of bone morphogenetic protein-2 required to induce bone formation in large grafts. It has been recently reported that platelet-derived growth factor-BB (PDGF) directly enhances the osteogenesis of ASCs when applied at physiological concentrations. In this study, a biomimetic delivery system that tethers PDGF to decellularized bone matrix (DCB) is developed to enhance osteogenic signaling in bone grafts by colocalizing PDGF-extracellular matrix cues. Heparin is conjugated to DCB particles (HC-DCB) to promote sustained binding of PDGF via electrostatic interactions. HC-DCB particles bind to PDGF with >99% efficiency and release significantly less PDGF over 21 days compared to nonconjugated DCB particles (1.1% vs 22.8%). HC-DCB-PDGF signaling in polycaprolactone (PCL)-fibrin grafts promotes >40 mu g Ca2+ mu g(-1) DNA deposition by ASCs during in vitro osteogenic culture compared to grafts without HC-DCB or PDGF. Furthermore, more bone formation is observed in grafts with HC-DCB-PDGF at 12 weeks following implantation of grafts into murine critical-sized calvarial defects. Collectively, these results demonstrate that HC-DCB enhances the osteogenic signaling of PDGF to ASCs and may be applied to promote ASC-mediated bone regeneration in critical-sized defects.

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