Nonintegrating knockdown and customized scaffold design enhances human adipose-derived stem cells in skeletal repair.

Journal: Stem Cells (Dayton, Ohio)
Published:
Abstract

An urgent need exists in clinical medicine for suitable alternatives to available techniques for bone tissue repair. Human adipose-derived stem cells (hASCs) represent a readily available, autogenous cell source with well-documented in vivo osteogenic potential. In this article, we manipulated Noggin expression levels in hASCs using lentiviral and nonintegrating minicircle short hairpin ribonucleic acid (shRNA) methodologies in vitro and in vivo to enhance hASC osteogenesis. Human ASCs with Noggin knockdown showed significantly increased bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling and osteogenic differentiation both in vitro and in vivo, and when placed onto a BMP-releasing scaffold embedded with lentiviral Noggin shRNA particles, hASCs more rapidly healed mouse calvarial defects. This study therefore suggests that genetic targeting of hASCs combined with custom scaffold design can optimize hASCs for skeletal regenerative medicine.

Authors
Benjamin Levi, Jeong Hyun, Emily Nelson, Shuli Li, Daniel Montoro, Derrick Wan, Fang Jia, Jason Glotzbach, Aaron James, Min Lee, Mei Huang, Natalina Quarto, Geoffrey Gurtner, Joseph Wu, Michael Longaker