Title of article
In vivo study of anterior cruciate ligament regeneration using mesenchymal stem cells and silk scaffold
Author/Authors
Hongbin Fan، نويسنده , , Haifeng Liu، نويسنده , , Eugene J.W. Wong، نويسنده , , Siew L. Toh، نويسنده , , James C.H. Goh، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
14
From page
3324
To page
3337
Abstract
Although most in vitro studies indicate that silk is a suitable biomaterial for ligament tissue engineering, in vivo studies of implanted silk scaffolds for ligament reconstruction are still lacking. The objective of this study is to investigate anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) regeneration using mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) and silk scaffold. The scaffold was fabricated by incorporating microporous silk sponges into knitted silk mesh, which mimicked the structures of ligament extracellular matrix (ECM). In vitro culture demonstrated that MSCs on scaffolds proliferated vigorously and produced abundant collagen. The transcription levels of ligament-specific genes also increased with time. Then MSCs/scaffold was implanted to regenerate ACL in vivo. After 24 weeks, histology observation showed that MSCs were distributed throughout the regenerated ligament and exhibited fibroblast morphology. The key ligament ECM components including collagen I, collagen III, and tenascin-C were produced prominently. Furthermore, direct ligament–bone insertion with typical four zones (bone, mineralized fibrocartilage, fibrocartilage, ligament) was reconstructed, which resembled the native structure of ACL–bone insertion. The tensile strength of regenerated ligament also met the mechanical requirements. Moreover, its histological grading score was significantly higher than that of control. In conclusion, the results imply that silk scaffold has great potentials in future clinical applications.
Keywords
Tissue engineeringLigamentSilkRegenerationMesenchymal stem cells
Journal title
Biomaterials
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Biomaterials
Record number
483140
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