Guiding Chondrogenesis and Osteogenesis with Mineral-Coated Hydroxyapatite and BMP-2 Incorporated within High-Density hMSC Aggregates for Bone Regeneration.

Journal: ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering
Published:
Abstract

Since hydroxyapatite and bone morphogenetic protein-2 (BMP-2) can regulate chondrogenesis and osteogenesis, their individual and combined effects on endochondral ossification within human bone marrow-derived stem cell (hMSC) aggregates were investigated. Hydroxyapatite was presented in the form of mineral-coated hydroxyapatite microparticles (MCM) capable of controlled BMP-2 delivery. Aggregates were treated with varied BMP-2 concentrations supplemented in the media and loaded onto MCM to examine the influence of BMP-2 amount and spatial presentation on regulating chondrogenesis and osteogenesis. MCM alone induced GAG and type II collagen production by week 5 for two of three donors, and BMP-2 may have accelerated MCM-induced chondrogenesis. ALP activity and calcium content of cells-only aggregates suggest that the BMP-2-induced osteogenic response may be concentration-dependent. Treatment with MCM and BMP-2 resulted in chondrogenesis as early as week 2, which may have promoted additional mineralization by week 5, suggesting the induction of endochondral ossification. Released BMP-2 had similar if not higher levels of bioactivity compared to that of exogenous BMP-2 with regard to chondrogenesis and osteogenesis. In addition to providing localized and sustained BMP-2 delivery, MCM incorporation within aggregates yields a self-sustaining system that may be injected or implanted more rapidly to heal bone defects through endochondral ossification without extended in vitro culture.

Authors
Phuong Dang, Neha Dwivedi, Xiaohua Yu, Lauren Phillips, Caitlin Bowerman, William Murphy, Eben Alsberg