Abstract

BackgroundPhysical loading is necessary to maintain bone tissue integrity. Loading-induced fluid shear is recognised as one of the most potent bone micromechanical cues and has been shown to direct stem cell osteogenesis. However, the effect of pressure transients, which drive fluid flow, on human bone marrow stem cell (hBMSC) osteogenesis is undetermined. Therefore, the objective of the study is to employ a systematic analysis of cyclic hydrostatic pressure (CHP) parameters predicted to occur in vivo on early hBMSC osteogenic responses and late-stage osteogenic lineage commitment.MethodshBMSC were exposed to CHP of 10 kPa, 100 kPa and 300 kPa magnitudes at frequencies of 0.5 Hz, 1 Hz and 2 Hz for 1 h, 2 h and 4 h of stimulation, and the effect on early osteogenic gene expression of COX2, RUNX2 and OPN was determined. Moreover, to decipher whether CHP can induce stem cell lineage commitment, hBMSCs were stimulated for 4 days for 2 h/day using 10 kPa, 100 kPa and 300 kPa pressures at 2 Hz frequency and cultured statically for an additional 1–2 weeks. Pressure-induced osteogenesis was quantified based on ATP release, collagen synthesis and mineral deposition.ResultsCHP elicited a positive, but variable, early osteogenic response in hBMSCs in a magnitude- and frequency-dependent manner, that is gene specific. COX2 expression elicited magnitude-dependent effects which were not present for RUNX2 or OPN mRNA expression. However, the most robust pro-osteogenic response was found at the highest magnitude (300 kPa) and frequency regimes (2 Hz). Interestingly, long-term mechanical stimulation utilising 2 Hz frequency elicited a magnitude-dependent release of ATP; however, all magnitudes promoted similar levels of collagen synthesis and significant mineral deposition, demonstrating that lineage commitment is magnitude independent. This therefore demonstrates that physiological levels of pressures, as low as 10 kPa, within the bone can drive hBMSC osteogenic lineage commitment.ConclusionOverall, these findings demonstrate an important role for cyclic hydrostatic pressure in hBMSCs and bone mechanobiology, which should be considered when studying pressure-driven fluid shear effects in hBMSCs mechanobiology. Moreover, these findings may have clinical implication in terms of bioreactor-based bone tissue engineering strategies.

Highlights

  • Physical loading is necessary to maintain bone tissue integrity

  • Effect of CHP magnitude on early osteogenic gene expression in human bone marrow stem cell (hBMSC) Stimulation of hBMSCs with cyclic hydrostatic pressure displays a variable osteogenic response based on Messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) expression of the osteogenic markers cyclooxygenase 2 (COX2), RUNX2 and OPN compared to static conditions

  • COX2 mRNA expression is upregulated in response to CHP in a magnitude dependent manner (Fig. 2a)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Loading-induced fluid shear is recognised as one of the most potent bone micromechanical cues and has been shown to direct stem cell osteogenesis. The effect of pressure transients, which drive fluid flow, on human bone marrow stem cell (hBMSC) osteogenesis is undetermined. Bone is exposed to constant cyclic loading which is necessary to maintain tissue integrity [1,2,3,4] This effect is mediated in part, by bone marrow stem cells (BMSC), which undergo osteogenic lineage commitment in response to loading to replenish the population of bone-synthesising cells [5, 6]. Decoupling the effect of pressure transients from fluid shear on stem cell osteogenesis would identify the driving physical forces in loading induced bone formation, focusing efforts to utilise this information to enhance BMSC osteogenesis and bone repair

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call