4.8 Article

Macropore design of tissue engineering scaffolds regulates mesenchymal stem cell differentiation fate

Journal

BIOMATERIALS
Volume 272, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2021.120769

Keywords

Craniosynostosis; Stem cell niche; Osteogenesis; Vascularization; Scaffold; Macropore

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health, National Institute for Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR) [R01-DE027662, T32-DE007057, F30-DE029359]

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The study demonstrates that scaffold pore size plays a crucial role in regulating the fate of mesenchymal cells, with sufficiently large pores promoting bone formation and small pores maintaining stemness to prevent differentiation. The geometry of scaffold pores is identified as a key factor in determining cell and tissue fate, providing a novel design motif for controlling tissue regenerative processes.
Craniosynostosis is a debilitating birth defect characterized by the premature fusion of cranial bones resulting from premature loss of stem cells located in suture tissue between growing bones. Mesenchymal stromal cells in long bone and the cranial suture are known to be multipotent cell sources in the appendicular skeleton and cranium, respectively. We are developing biomaterial constructs to maintain stemness of the cranial suture cell population towards an ultimate goal of diminishing craniosynostosis patient morbidity. Recent evidence suggests that physical features of synthetic tissue engineering scaffolds modulate cell and tissue fate. In this study, macroporous tissue engineering scaffolds with well-controlled spherical pores were fabricated by a sugar porogen template method. Cell-scaffold constructs were implanted subcutaneously in mice for up to eight weeks then assayed for mineralization, vascularization, extracellular matrix composition, and gene expression. Pore size differentially regulates cell fate, where sufficiently large pores provide an osteogenic niche adequate for bone formation, while sufficiently small pores (<125 ?m in diameter) maintain stemness and prevent differentiation. Cell-scaffold constructs cultured in vitro followed the same pore size-controlled differentiation fate. We therefore attribute the differential cell and tissue fate to scaffold pore geometry. Scaffold pore size regulates mesenchymal cell fate, providing a novel design motif to control tissue regenerative processes and develop mesenchymal stem cell niches in vivo and in vitro through biophysical features.

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