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Porous Geometry Guided Micro-mechanical Environment Within Scaffolds for Cell Mechanobiology Study in Bone Tissue Engineering

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2021.736489

Keywords

micro-mechanical environment; mechanical stimulation; scaffold porous geometry; mechanobiology; bone tissue engineering

Funding

  1. EU [336043]
  2. SCoRE Cymru Award from Welsh government [SWF19004]

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Mechanobiology research aims to understand the role of mechanics in cell physiology and pathology, especially in the study of bone physiology and pathology. Researchers can influence the cell response by adjusting scaffold pore geometries and the micro-mechanical environment in bioreactors. Future work may involve using artificial intelligence-assisted techniques for automatic design of solid porous scaffold geometry to optimize the micro-mechanical environment.
Mechanobiology research is for understanding the role of mechanics in cell physiology and pathology. It will have implications for studying bone physiology and pathology and to guide the strategy for regenerating both the structural and functional features of bone. Mechanobiological studies in vitro apply a dynamic micro-mechanical environment to cells via bioreactors. Porous scaffolds are commonly used for housing the cells in a three-dimensional (3D) culturing environment. Such scaffolds usually have different pore geometries (e.g. with different pore shapes, pore dimensions and porosities). These pore geometries can affect the internal micro-mechanical environment that the cells experience when loaded in the bioreactor. Therefore, to adjust the applied micro-mechanical environment on cells, researchers can tune either the applied load and/or the design of the scaffold pore geometries. This review will provide information on how the micro-mechanical environment (e.g. fluid-induced wall shear stress and mechanical strain) is affected by various scaffold pore geometries within different bioreactors. It shall allow researchers to estimate/quantify the micro-mechanical environment according to the already known pore geometry information, or to find a suitable pore geometry according to the desirable micro-mechanical environment to be applied. Finally, as future work, artificial intelligent - assisted techniques, which can achieve an automatic design of solid porous scaffold geometry for tuning/optimising the micro-mechanical environment are suggested.

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