• Title of article

    A cartilage ECM-derived 3-D porous acellular matrix scaffold for in vivo cartilage tissue engineering with PKH26-labeled chondrogenic bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells

  • Author/Authors

    Qiang Yang، نويسنده , , Jiang Peng، نويسنده , , Quanyi Guo، نويسنده , , Jingxiang Huang، نويسنده , , Li Zhang، نويسنده , , Jun Yao، نويسنده , , Fei Yang، نويسنده , , Shenguo Wang، نويسنده , , Wenjing Xu، نويسنده , , Aiyuan Wang، نويسنده , , Shibi Lu، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
  • Pages
    10
  • From page
    2378
  • To page
    2387
  • Abstract
    We developed a natural, acellular, 3-D interconnected porous scaffold derived from cartilage extracellular matrix (ECM). Human cartilage was physically shattered, then decellularized sequentially with use of hypotonic buffer, TritonX-100, and a nuclease solution and made into a suspension. The scaffold was fabricated by simple freeze-drying and cross-linking techniques. On histology, scaffolds showed most of the ECM components after removal of the cell fragments, and scanning electron microscopy revealed a 3-D interconnected porous structure. Cellular viability assay revealed no cytotoxic effects. In vitro study showed that the novel scaffold could provide a suitable 3-D environment to support the adheration, proliferation and differentiation of bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (BMSCs) to chondrocytes in culture with chondrogenic medium after 21 days. Chondrogenically induced BMSCs labeled with fluorescent dye PKH26 were then grown on scaffolds and implanted subcutaneously into nude mice. Four weeks later, cartilage-like tissue formed, with positive staining for Safranin O, tuoluidine blue and collagen II. Cells in the samples seemed to confirm that they originated from the labeled BMSCs, as confirmed by in vivo fluorescent imaging and immunofluorescence examination. In conclusion, the cartilage ECM-derived porous scaffold shows potential as biomaterial for cartilage tissue engineering, and PKH26 fluorescent labeling and in vivo fluorescent imaging can be useful for cell tracking and analyzing cell-scaffold constructs in vivo.
  • Keywords
    fluorescence , Scaffolds , Cartilage tissue engineering , Decellularization , ECM (extracellular matrix)
  • Journal title
    Biomaterials
  • Serial Year
    2008
  • Journal title
    Biomaterials
  • Record number

    483040