Title of article
Variations in chondrogenesis of human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells in fibrin/alginate blended hydrogels
Author/Authors
Ma، نويسنده , , Kun and Titan، نويسنده , , Ashley L. and Stafford، نويسنده , , Melissa and Zheng، نويسنده , , Chun hua and Levenston، نويسنده , , Marc E.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
11
From page
3754
To page
3764
Abstract
Fibrin and alginate hydrogels have been widely used to support chondrogenesis of bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (BM-MSCs) for articular cartilage and fibrocartilage tissue engineering, with each material offering distinct advantages and disadvantages. Attempting to produce a gel scaffold exhibiting beneficial characteristics of both materials, we fabricated fibrin/alginate blended hydrogels at various blend ratios and evaluated the gel morphology, mechanical properties and their support for BM-MSC chondrogenesis. Results show that when the fibrin/alginate ratio decreased, the fibrin architecture transitioned from uniform to interconnected fibrous and finally to disconnected islands against an alginate background, with opposing trends in the alginate architecture. Fibrin maintained gel extensibility and promoted cell proliferation, while alginate improved the gel biostability and better supported glycosaminoglycan and collagen II production and chondrogenic gene expression. Blended gels had physical and biological characteristics intermediate between fibrin and alginate. Of the blends examined, FA 40:8 (40 mg ml−1 fibrinogen blended with 8 mg ml−1 alginate) was found to be the most appropriate group for future studies on tension-driven BM-MSC fibrochondrogenesis. As BM-MSC differentiation appeared to vary between fibrin and alginate regions of blended scaffolds, this study also highlighted the potential to develop spatially heterogeneous tissues through manipulating the heterogeneity of scaffold composition.
Keywords
mesenchymal stem cells , Chondrogenesis , fibrin , Hydrogel , Alginate
Journal title
Acta Biomaterialia
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Acta Biomaterialia
Record number
1756497
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