Osteogenic differentiation of human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) into osteoblasts is a prerequisite for subsequent bone formation. Numerous studies have explored osteogenic differentiation under standard tissue culture conditions, which usually employ 21% of oxygen. However, bone precursor cells such as hMSCs reside in stem cell niches of low-oxygen atmospheres.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCarboxy terminated-poly(propylene fumarate)-co-ethylene glycol) (CT-PPF-co-PEG) was prepared and set into crosslinked hydrogel material with acrylamide. The setting studies reveal that this copolymer system can be used as an injectable material. The hydrogel material exhibits a higher degree of swelling, good mechanical strength and flexibility.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTissue engineering of sizeable cell-scaffold constructs is limited by gradients in tissue quality from the periphery toward the center. Because homogenous delivery of oxygen to three-dimensional (3D) cell cultures remains an unsolved challenge, we hypothesized that uneven oxygen supply may impede uniform cellular growth on scaffolds. In this study we challenged static and dynamic 3D culture systems designed for bone tissue engineering applications with a well-growing subclone of MC3T3-E1 preosteoblasts and continuously measured the oxygen concentrations in the center of cell-seeded scaffolds and in the surrounding medium.
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