4.7 Article

The Effect of Pore Directionality of Collagen Scaffolds on Cell Differentiation and In Vivo Osteogenesis

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 13, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym13183187

Keywords

bone tissue engineering; osteogenesis; type I collagen; pore directionality; BMP-2; VEGF

Funding

  1. Administrative Department of Science, Technology and Innovation (COLCIENCIAS)
  2. Research Department (DIEB) of the Universidad Nacional de Colombia [37687]
  3. Spanish Network on Cell Therapy (Red TerCel) [RD16/0011/0022]
  4. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (MICINN) [PID2020-117255RB-I00]
  5. VI National R&D&I Plan 2008-2011, Iniciativa Ingenio 2010, Consolider Program, CIBER Actions, the Instituto de Salud Carlos III
  6. European Regional Development Fund
  7. CIBER-BBN (Instituto de Salud Carlos III)

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This study fabricated uni- and multidirectional collagen sponges and evaluated their microstructural, physicochemical, mechanical and biological characteristics. The unidirectional sponges showed higher tensile strength, Young's modulus and liquid absorption capacity, but pore orientation had some influence on cell attachment and differentiation. Both types of scaffolds supported bone formation in an ectopic rat model, with histological analysis confirming the influence of pore orientation on the osteogenic process.
Although many bone substitutes have been designed and produced, the development of bone tissue engineering products that mimic the microstructural characteristics of native bone remains challenging. It has been shown that pore orientation within collagen scaffolds influences bone matrix formation by the endochondral route. In addition, that the unidirectional orientation of the scaffolds can limit the growth of blood vessels. However, a comparison between the amount of bone that can be formed in scaffolds with different pore orientations in addition to analyzing the effect of loading osteogenic and proangiogenic factors is still required. In this work we fabricated uni- and multidirectional collagen sponges and evaluated their microstructural, physicochemical, mechanical and biological characteristics. Although the porosity and average pore size of the uni- and multidirectional scaffolds was similar (94.5% vs. 97.1% and 260 mu m vs. 269 mu m, respectively) the unidirectional sponges had a higher tensile strength, Young's modulus and capacity to uptake liquids than the multidirectional ones (0.271 MPa vs. 0.478 MPa, 9.623 MPa vs. 3.426 MPa and 8000% mass gain vs. 4000%, respectively). Culturing of rat bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells demonstrated that these scaffolds support cell growth and osteoblastic differentiation in the presence of BMP-2 in vitro, although the pore orientation somehow affected cell attachment and differentiation. The evaluation of the ability of the scaffolds to support bone growth when loaded with BMP-2 or BMP-2 + VEGF in an ectopic rat model showed that they both supported bone formation. Histological analysis and quantification of mineralized matrix revealed that the pore orientation of the collagen scaffolds influenced the osteogenic process.

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