4.7 Article

A Tissue Engineering Acoustophoretic (TEA) Set-up for the Enhanced Osteogenic Differentiation of Murine Mesenchymal Stromal Cells (mMSCs)

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms231911473

Keywords

acoustophoresis; ultrasound; tissue engineering; patterned 3-D construct; mesenchymal stromal cells; osteogenic differentiation; bone regeneration

Funding

  1. DFG [PU 701/1-1]
  2. Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action (BMWK) [KK5029901AP0]
  3. Chinese Scholarship Council [CSC 202008370230]

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In order to rapidly develop precision medicine and patient-oriented treatment strategies, novel technological solutions are urgently needed. This study developed an ultrasound-based tissue engineering acoustophoretic set-up to organize murine mesenchymal stromal cells in an in situ polymerizing 3-D fibrin hydrogel. The structured hydrogels exhibited enhanced expression of osteogenic markers and cell-cycle-progression-associated genes, suggesting the potential for improved regenerative properties in bone healing.
Quickly developing precision medicine and patient-oriented treatment strategies urgently require novel technological solutions. The randomly cell-populated scaffolds usually used for tissue engineering often fail to mimic the highly anisotropic characteristics of native tissue. In this work, an ultrasound standing-wave-based tissue engineering acoustophoretic (TEA) set-up was developed to organize murine mesenchymal stromal cells (mMSCs) in an in situ polymerizing 3-D fibrin hydrogel. The resultant constructs, consisting of 17 cell layers spaced at 300 mu m, were obtained by continuous wave ultrasound applied at a 2.5 MHz frequency. The patterned mMSCs preserved the structured behavior within 10 days of culturing in osteogenic conditions. Cell viability was moderately increased 1 day after the patterning; it subdued and evened out, with the cells randomly encapsulated in hydrogels, within 21 days of culturing. Cells in the structured hydrogels exhibited enhanced expression of certain osteogenic markers, i.e., Runt-related transcription factor 2 (RUNX2), osterix (Osx) transcription factor, collagen-1 alpha1 (COL1A1), osteopontin (OPN), osteocalcin (OCN), and osteonectin (ON), as well as of certain cell-cycle-progression-associated genes, i.e., Cyclin D1, cysteine-rich angiogenic inducer 61 (CYR61), and anillin (ANLN), when cultured with osteogenic supplements and, for ANLN, also in the expansion media. Additionally, OPN expression was also augmented on day 5 in the patterned gels cultured without the osteoinductive media, suggesting the pro-osteogenic influence of the patterned cell organization. The TEA set-up proposes a novel method for non-invasively organizing cells in a 3-D environment, potentially enhancing the regenerative properties of the designed anisotropic constructs for bone healing.

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