4.7 Article

Chemotactic and Angiogenic Potential of Mineralized Collagen Scaffolds Functionalized with Naturally Occurring Bioactive Factor Mixtures to Stimulate Bone Regeneration

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22115836

Keywords

growth factor; bone regeneration; collagen scaffold; bone substitute materials; MSC secretome; hypoxia-conditioned medium; platelet lysates; adipose tissue extract

Funding

  1. Roland Ernst Stiftung, Dresden, Germany
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [SFB TR67, 125378466, SFB TR79, 170599561]

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In this study, heparin-modified mineralized collagen scaffolds were successfully functionalized with naturally occurring bioactive factor mixtures to promote cell migration and vascularization, serving as a potential strategy for enhancing bone defect regeneration.
To develop cost-effective and efficient bone substitutes for improved regeneration of bone defects, heparin-modified mineralized collagen scaffolds were functionalized with concentrated, naturally occurring bioactive factor mixtures derived from adipose tissue, platelet-rich plasma and conditioned medium from a hypoxia-treated human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cell line. Besides the analysis of the release kinetics of functionalized scaffolds, the bioactivity of the released bioactive factors was tested with regard to chemotaxis and angiogenic tube formation. Additionally, functionalized scaffolds were seeded with human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (hBM-MSC) and their osteogenic and angiogenic potential was investigated. The release of bioactive factors from the scaffolds was highest within the first 3 days. Bioactivity of the released factors could be confirmed for all bioactive factor mixtures by successful chemoattraction of hBM-MSC in a transwell assay as well as by the formation of prevascular structures in a 2D co-culture system of hBM-MSC and human umbilical vein endothelial cells. The cells seeded directly onto the functionalized scaffolds were able to express osteogenic markers and form tubular networks. In conclusion, heparin-modified mineralized collagen scaffolds could be successfully functionalized with naturally occurring bioactive factor mixtures promoting cell migration and vascularization.

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