Journal of Biological Engineering (Jul 2023)

Dual growth factor-modified microspheres nesting human-derived umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells for bone regeneration

  • Wenzhi Song,
  • Lanlan Zhao,
  • Yuqi Gao,
  • Chunyu Han,
  • Shengrui Gao,
  • Min Guo,
  • Jianfei Bai,
  • Liqiang Wang,
  • Wanzhong Yin,
  • Feng Wu,
  • Peibiao Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13036-023-00360-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1
pp. 1 – 20

Abstract

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Abstract Background Modular tissue engineering (MTE) is a novel “bottom-up” approach that aims to mimic complex tissue microstructural features. The constructed micromodules are assembled into engineered biological tissues with repetitive functional microunits and form cellular networks. This is emerging as a promising strategy for reconstruction of biological tissue. Results Herein, we constructed a micromodule for MTE and developed engineered osteon-like microunits by inoculating human-derived umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells (HUMSCs) onto nHA/PLGA microspheres with surface modification of dual growth factors (BMP2/bFGF). By evaluating the results of proliferation and osteogenic differentiation ability of HUMSCs in vitro, the optimal ratio of the dual growth factor (BMP2/bFGF) combination was derived as 5:5. In vivo assessments showed the great importance of HUMSCs for osteogneic differentiation. Ultimately, direct promotion of early osteo-differentiation manifested as upregulation of Runx-2 gene expression. The vascularization capability was evaluated by tube formation assays, demonstrating the importance of HUMSCs in the microunits for angiogenesis. Conclusions The modification of growth factors and HUMSCs showed ideal biocompatibility and osteogenesis combined with nHA/PLGA scaffolds. The micromodules constructed in the current study provide an efficient stem cell therapy strategy for bone defect repair.

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