• Title of article

    The influence of collagen–glycosaminoglycan scaffold relative density and microstructural anisotropy on tenocyte bioactivity and transcriptomic stability

  • Author/Authors

    Caliari، نويسنده , , Steven R. and Weisgerber، نويسنده , , Daniel W. and Ramirez، نويسنده , , Manuel A. and Kelkhoff، نويسنده , , Douglas O. and Harley، نويسنده , , Brendan A.C.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
  • Pages
    14
  • From page
    27
  • To page
    40
  • Abstract
    Biomaterials for orthopedic tissue engineering must balance mechanical and bioactivity concerns. This work describes the fabrication of a homologous series of anisotropic collagen–GAG (CG) scaffolds with aligned tracks of ellipsoidal pores but increasing relative densities ( ρ ∗ / ρ s ) , and we report the role scaffold relative density plays in directing tenocyte bioactivity. Scaffold permeability and mechanical properties, both in tension and compression, were significantly influenced by relative density in a manner predicted by cellular solids models. Equine tenocytes showed greater levels of attachment, metabolic activity, soluble collagen synthesis, and alignment as well as less cell-mediated scaffold contraction in anisotropic CG scaffolds of increasing relative density. Notably, the lowest density scaffolds experienced significant cell-mediated contraction with associated decreases in tenocyte number as well as loss of microstructural integrity, aligned contact guidance cues, and preferential tenocyte orientation over a 14 day culture period. Gene expression analyses suggested tenocyte de-differentiation in the lowest density scaffold while indicating that the highest density scaffold supported significant increases in COMP (4-fold), tenascin-C (3-fold), and scleraxis (15-fold) expression as well as significant decreases in MMP-1 (9-fold) and MMP-13 (13-fold) expression on day 14. These results suggest that anisotropic scaffold relative density can help to modulate the maintenance of a more tendon-like microenvironment and aid long-term tenocyte transcriptomic stability. Overall, this work demonstrates that relative density is a critical scaffold parameter, not only for insuring mechanical competence, but also for directing cell transcriptomic stability and behavior.
  • Keywords
    Scaffold , Tendon , Gene expression , relative density , Collagen
  • Journal title
    Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials
  • Serial Year
    2012
  • Journal title
    Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials
  • Record number

    1405368