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Towards an intraoperative engineering of osteogenic and vasculogenic grafts from the stromal vascular fraction of human adipose tissue
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 1195977
Author(s) Müller, A. M.; Mehrkens, A.; Schäfer, D. J.; Jaquiery, C.; Güven, S.; Lehmicke, M.; Martinetti, R.; Farhadi, I.; Jakob, M.; Scherberich, A.; Martin, I.
Author(s) at UniBasel Schaefer, Dirk Johannes
Jaquiéry, Claude Armand
Jakob, Marcel
Martin, Ivan
Scherberich, Arnaud
Year 2010
Title Towards an intraoperative engineering of osteogenic and vasculogenic grafts from the stromal vascular fraction of human adipose tissue
Journal European Cells and Materials
Volume 19
Pages / Article-Number 127-35
Keywords Intraoperative, osteogenic, vasculogenic, tissue engineered grafts, human, adipose-derived cells, ceramic materials
Abstract Grafts generated by cultivation of progenitor cells from the stromal vascular fraction of human adipose tissue have been proven to have osteogenic and vasculogenic properties in vivo. However, in vitro manufacture of such implants is challenged by complex, impractical and expensive processes, and requires implantation in a separate surgery. This study investigates the feasibility of an intraoperative approach to engineer cell-based bone grafts with tissue harvest, cell isolation, cell seeding onto a scaffold and subsequent implantation within a few hours. Freshly isolated adipose tissue cells from a total of 11 donors, containing variable fractions of mesenchymal and endothelial progenitors, were embedded at different densities in a fibrin hydrogel, which was wrapped around bone substitute materials based on beta-tricalcium phosphate (ChronOS), hydroxyapatite (Engipore), or acellular xenograft (Bio-Oss). The resulting constructs, generated within 3 hours from biopsy harvest, were immediately implanted ectopically in nude mice and analysed after eight weeks. All explants contained blood vessels formed by human endothelial cells, functionally connected to the recipient's vasculature. Human origin cells were also found within osteoid structures, positively immunostained for bone sialoprotein and osteocalcin. However, even with the highest loaded cell densities, no frank bone tissue was detected, independently of the material used. These results provide a proof-of-principle that an intraoperative engineering of autologous cell-based vasculogenic bone substitutes is feasible, but highlight that - in the absence of in vitro commitment--additional cues (e.g., low dose of osteogenic factors or orthotopic environmental conditions) are likely needed to support complete osteoblastic cell differentiation and bone tissue generation.
Publisher AO Foundation
ISSN/ISBN 1473-2262
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/dok/A6006155
Full Text on edoc Available
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.22203/eCM.v019a13
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20198567
ISI-Number WOS:000278752500010
Document type (ISI) Journal Article
 
   

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