Abstract

Background aimsHuman mesenchymal stromal cells or marrow stromal cells (MSCs) are of great interest for bone healing due to their multi-potency and trophic effects. However, traditional MSC expansion methods using 2-dimensional monolayer (MNL) flasks or cell stacks are limited by labor-intensive handling, lack of scalability, the need for enzymatic cell harvesting and the need for attachment to a scaffold before in vivo delivery. Here, we present a biodegradable microcarrier and MSC bioprocessing system that may overcome the abovementioned challenges. MethodsWe cultured human early MSCs (heMSCs) on biodegradable polycaprolactone microcarriers (PCL MCs) coated with extracellular matrix (ECM) and evaluated the in vitro osteogenic differentiation and in vivo bone formation capacity of ECM-coated PCL MC-bound heMSCs compared with conventional MNL-cultured cells. ResultsWe found that heMSCs proliferate well on PCL MCs coated with a fibronectin, poly-l-lysine, and fibronectin (FN+PLL+FN) coating (cPCL MCs). During in vitro osteogenic induction, heMSCs cultured on cPCL MCs displayed a 68% increase in specific calcium deposition compared with cultures on MNL. In a mouse ectopic mineralization model, bone mass was equivalent for MNL-expanded and cPCL MC-bound heMSC implants but higher in both cases when compared with cell-free cPCL MC implants at 16 weeks post-implantation. In summary, compared with MNL cultures, biodegradable MC MSC cultures provide the benefits of large-scale expansion of cells and can be delivered in vivo, thereby eliminating the need for cell harvesting and use of scaffolds for cell delivery. These results highlight the promise of delivering heMSCs cultured on cPCL MCs for bone applications.

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