Abstract

BackgroundCells, scaffolds, and factors are the triad of regenerative engineering; however, it is difficult to distinguish whether cells in the regenerative construct are from the seeded cells or host cells via the host blood supply. We performed a novel in vivo study to transplant enhanced green fluorescent pig mesenchymal stem cells (EGFP-pMSCs) into calvarial defect of DsRed pigs. The cell distribution and proportion were distinguished by the different fluorescent colors through the whole regenerative period.Method/ResultsEight adult domestic Ds-Red pigs were treated with five modalities: empty defects without scaffold (group 1); defects filled only with scaffold (group 2); defects filled with osteoinduction medium-loaded scaffold (group 3); defects filled with 5 x 103 cells/scaffold (group 4); and defects filled with 5 x 104 cells/scaffold (group 5). The in vitro cell distribution, morphology, osteogenic differentiation, and fluorescence images of groups 4 and 5 were analyzed. Two animals were sacrificed at 1, 2, 3, and 4 weeks after transplantation. The in vivo fluorescence imaging and quantification data showed that EGFP-pMSCs were represented in the scaffolds in groups 4 and 5 throughout the whole regenerative period. A higher seeded cell density resulted in more sustained seeded cells in bone regeneration compared to a lower seeded cell density. Host cells were recruited by seeded cells if enough space was available in the scaffold. Host cells in groups 1 to 3 did not change from the 1st week to 4th week, which indicates that the scaffold without seeded cells cannot recruit host cells even when enough space is available for cell ingrowth. The histological and immunohistochemical data showed that more cells were involved in osteogenesis in scaffolds with seeded cells.ConclusionOur in vivo results showed that more seeded cells recruit more host cells and that both cell types participate in osteogenesis. These results suggest that scaffolds without seeded cells may not be effective in bone transplantation.

Highlights

  • Skeletal defects require surgery using bone grafts

  • Our in vivo results showed that more seeded cells recruit more host cells and that both cell types participate in osteogenesis

  • These results suggest that scaffolds without seeded cells may not be effective in bone transplantation

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Summary

Introduction

Skeletal defects require surgery using bone grafts. Autografts are the gold standard for bone grafting [1]; donor site morbidity and the limited amount of available donor tissue restrict their application [2, 3]. Regenerative tissue engineering using cells, scaffolds, factors and blood supply [4] has become an alternative method to treat skeletal bone defects. Depleted of osteoprogenitor cells like mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), the fusion rate still reaches 73% to 100% in instrumented spinal fusion [7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16], making allograft a clinically feasible alternative form of fusion. Scaffolds, and factors are the triad of regenerative engineering; it is difficult to distinguish whether cells in the regenerative construct are from the seeded cells or host cells via the host blood supply. The cell distribution and proportion were distinguished by the different fluorescent colors through the whole regenerative period

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