Open Access Article
Lukasova Vera
*abc,
Buzgo Matej
b,
Vocetkova Karolina
ab,
Kubíková Terezad,
Tonar Zbyněkd,
Doupnik Miroslavb,
Blahnova Veronikaab,
Litvinec Andreja,
Sovkova Veraab,
Voltrová Barbora
a,
Staffa Andrea
b,
Svora Petrb,
Kralickova Milenad,
Amler Evzenbe,
Filova Evaae,
Rustichelli Francoa and
Rampichova Michalaab
aLaboratory of Tissue Engineering, The Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Experimental Medicine, Videnska 1083, 142 20 Prague 4, Czech Republic. E-mail: vera_lukasova@labdemo.cz; Fax: +420 2 9644 2387; Tel: +420 2 9644 2387
bUniversity Center for Energy Efficient Buildings, Czech Technical University in Prague, Trinecka 1024, 273 43, Bustehrad, Czech Republic
cDepartment of Cell Biology, Faculty of Science, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic
dDepartment of Histology and Embryology and Biomedical Center, Faculty of Medicine in Pilsen, Charles University, Karlovarská 48, 301 00, Pilsen, Czech Republic
eInstitute of Biophysics, 2nd Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, V Uvalu 84, 150 06 Prague 5, Czech Republic
First published on 13th June 2018
Bone regeneration is a long-term process requiring proper scaffolding and drug delivery systems. The current study delivers a three-dimensional (3D) scaffold prepared by blend centrifugal spinning loaded with the osteogenic supplements (OS) β-glycerol phosphate, ascorbate-2-phosphate and dexamethasone. The OS were successfully encapsulated into a fibrous scaffold and showed sustained release for 30 days. Furthermore, biological testing showed the osteoinductive properties of the scaffolds on a model of human mesenchymal stem cells and stimulatory effect on a model of osteoblasts. The osteoinductive properties were further proved in vivo in critical size defects of rabbits. The amount of bone trabecules was bigger compared to control fibers without OS. The results indicate that due to its long-term drug releasing properties, single step fabrication process and 3D structure, the system shows ideal properties for use as a cell-free bone implant in tissue-engineering.
In elderly patients the incidence of fractures has increased significantly.1 Moreover, fracture healing in older patients is slower due to the decreased regeneration capacity of bone. The risks, connected with autologous graft transplantations or the aspiration of the proper amount of autologous cells for cellular based scaffolds are therefore higher with increased patient age. As a solution, non-cellular based scaffolds enriched with bioactive compounds stimulating bone regeneration are attractive alternatives for the treatment of bone fracture healing.10 Since the regeneration process of bone is long, the supplementation of active molecules should be combined with systems prolonging drug delivery. The combination of drugs with drug delivery systems and scaffolds not only prolongs the bioavailability of the drugs, but also results in increased local concentration and stimulates bone healing in a spaciotemporal manner. Suitable bioactive compounds for osteogenesis promoting factors include widely used osteogenic supplements (OS)11,12 e.g. β-glycerol phosphate, ascorbate-2-phosphate, dexamethasone and also growth factors such as bone morphogenetic protein-2 (BMP-2) and -7, insulin growth factor or fibroblast growth factor.13–15
An advantage of drug releasing scaffolds is their active stimulation of the bone healing process. Electrospinning is one of the most utilized technologies for producing biomimetic and drug releasing scaffolds in bone tissue engineering.16 However, despite numerous advantages, electrospun scaffolds have a two-dimensional (2D) morphology, eliminating their practical application in healing large bone defects. For instance, the size of the pores is often insufficient to allow cell penetration.17 The goal of this study is to overcome the inherent properties of fibrous scaffolds to improve the osteogenesis of seeded cells and subsequently to test the properties in vivo. This can be achieved by a centrifugal spinning method, which allows for the production of 3D scaffolds with higher pore diameters.18 In the current work we aim to develop drug releasing 3D fibrous scaffolds by using a blend centrifugal spinning process. The technology of blend centrifugal spinning enables bioactive compounds to be encapsulated into the scaffold and their subsequent gradual release. The present work describes the fabrication, properties and osteoconductive potential of scaffolds prepared from poly-ε-caprolactone (PCL) with encapsulated OS. For in vitro testing of these scaffolds Saos2 osteosarcoma cell line as model of mature osteoblasts and hMSCs as multipotent stem cells were used.
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1 and blended with OS (β-glycerol phosphate, ascorbate-2-phosphate and dexamethasone). The spinneret was based on a flat disc with three orifices of G30 in size and a rotation speed of 10
000 rpm was used to prepare the fibrous meshes. The fibers were deposited on spunbond textile using vacuum-assisted deposition. Fibers with 4 different concentrations of OS were prepared: once concentrated OS (OS1), two times concentrated (OS2), five times concentrated (OS5) and ten times concentrated (OS10) (Table 1). Plain PCL fibers were used for control samples (CGM, COM). The spinning conditions for all groups were constant to evaluate the effect of polymeric blend properties on scaffold performance.
| Sample | asc-2-P (μg mL−1) | β-GP (mM) | dex (nM) | Sample | asc-2-P (μg mL−1) | β-GP (mM) | dex (nM) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| a asc-2-P, ascorbate-2-phosphate; β-GP, β-glycerol phosphate; dex, dexamethasone; OS, osteogenic supplement. | |||||||
| OS1 | 40 | 10 | 100 | OS5 | 200 | 50 | 500 |
| OS2 | 80 | 20 | 200 | OS10 | 400 | 100 | 1000 |
The analysis was performed in Eppendorf tubes. The samples were placed into Eppendorf tubes containing 0.25 mL of 2.5% ammonium molybdate solution followed by 0.25 mL of 10% ascorbic acid solution (freshly prepared), mixed thoroughly, and heated for 5 min in a boiling water bath. After cooling the samples in a cold-water bath for 5 min, the optical density at 820 nm was measured using a Synergy H1 microplate reader. In each series of measurements, parallel determinations were made of the blank values of the reagent solution and a standard preparation. The release experiment was performed in 5 replicates and samples were analyzed as absolute release and cumulative release.
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20, San Carlos, CA USA) was added and the samples were incubated overnight at 2–8 °C. After three washes with PBS/0.05% Tween 20, the samples were incubated with secondary antibody, Alexa Fluor 488 conjugated anti-rabbit antibody (Thermo Scientific), at a dilution of 1
:
300 for 45 min. Subsequently, a solution of propidium iodide was added for 5 min (5 μg mL−1 in PBS) to visualize the cellular nuclei. Finally, the samples were washed three times with PBS/0.05% Tween 20. A confocal microscope (ZEISS LSM 5 DUO) was used to detect the present osteocalcin (Alexa Fluor 488: λexc = 488 nm, λem = 505–550 nm propidium iodide: λexc = 561 nm, λem = 630–700 nm).
000 rpm.
The centrifugal spinning process resulted in the formation of a 3D fibrous mesh. The mesh was formed by fibers forming a porous structure with a thickness of about 3 mm. An analysis by SEM confirmed the fibrous character of all scaffolds (Fig. 1). A stereological analysis (Table 2) showed that with increase of OS concentration, the mean fiber diameter increased.
| OS1 | OS2 | OS5 | OS10 | PCL | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| a asc-2-P, ascorbate -2-phosphate; β-GP, β-glycerol phosphate; dex, dexamethasone; OS, osteogenic supplement; PCL, poly-ε-caprolactone; SD, standard deviation. | |||||
| Fiber diameter (nm) | 739.7 | 824.9 | 1569.7 | 697.8 | 974.6 |
| Fiber diameter − SD (nm) | 159.3 | 271.2 | 1067.7 | 527.7 | 299.1 |
| Maximum pore size (μm2) | 205.0 | 157.9 | 204.5 | 33.3 | 326.0 |
| Percentage of pores > 5 μm2 (%) | 51.1 | 43.3 | 58.0 | 39.3 | 46.6 |
| Mean pore size (μm2) | 11.7 | 10.1 | 16.3 | 2.6 | 13.7 |
| Mean pore size − SD (μm2) | 20.5 | 18.9 | 25.9 | 5.9 | 29.8 |
For the control PCL, the mean fiber diameter was 974.6 ± 299.1 nm (Table 2). Mean pore size was about 13.7 ± 29.8 μm2 and maximum pore size was 326 μm2. The scaffold contained polydisperse pores and the percentage of pores bigger than 5 μm2 was 46.6%. For the OS1 sample with the lowest concentration of OS, the mean fiber thickness decreased to 739.7 ± 159.3 nm. The mean pore size decreased to 11.7 ± 20.5 μm2. In case of OS2 group the fiber size further increased to 824.9 ± 271.2 nm. Similarly, in the group OS5 the mean fiber diameter increased to 1569.7 ± 1067.7 nm. The group showed high heterogeneity in fiber diameter, which may be related to change of solution properties. In case of OS10, the mean fiber diameter was 697.8 ± 527.7. Diameter of OS10 was lower compared to OS5, however the mesh contained higher presence of defects with non-fibrous morphology (Fig. 1N).
The encapsulation of OS was verified by FTIR-ATR spectroscopy (Fig. 2). The measurement showed the incorporation of β-glycerol phosphate, ascorbate-2-phosphate and dexamethasone into the scaffolds. The spectra of PCL without modification mainly contained a sharp peak corresponding to –C
O groups at 1700 cm−1 and C–H groups at 2800–2950 cm−1. The addition of OS resulted in an increase of –O–H group resonance at 3200–3500 cm−1. The hydroxyl group is present in all added supplements. The encapsulation of β-glycerol phosphate and ascorbate-2-phosphate was indicated by an increase in resonance of –PO4 groups at 1000 cm−1. The presence of dexamethasone was indicated by an increase of C
C resonance at 1600 cm−1.
In addition, a high resolution-SEM (HR-SEM) with EDS detector was used to analyze the distribution of phosphate in the samples (Fig. 3). Phosphate was detected in all samples. The signal is distributed across all fibers. However, the phosphate was located in clusters, indicating the presence of β-glycerol phosphate and ascorbate-2-phosphate signals. In addition, in OS5 and OS10 samples, the phosphate and oxygen weight percentage (Table 3) was higher, indicating successful encapsulation of β-glycerol phosphate and ascorbate-2-phosphate.
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| Fig. 3 HR-SEM analysis of PCL scaffolds. Images from scanning electron microscopy (A–D). Distribution of phosphate in PCL scaffolds with encapsulated OS, measured by HR-SEM with EDS detector (E–H). | ||
| Sample | C | P | O | Sample | C | P | O | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| wt% | SD | wt% | SD | wt% | SD | wt% | SD | wt% | SD | wt% | SD | ||
| OS1 | 78.75 | 0.06 | 0.9 | 0.03 | 18.64 | 0.04 | OS5 | 68.76 | 0.07 | 2.8 | 0.04 | 23.82 | 0.05 |
| OS2 | 78.28 | 0.06 | 0.65 | 0.03 | 19.77 | 0.05 | OS10 | 68.05 | 0.07 | 3.73 | 0.04 | 22.89 | 0.05 |
Nevertheless, the release of phosphate contained in β-glycerol phosphate and ascorbate-2-phosphate was performed to analyze the bioavailability. The release was performed for 31 days (Fig. 4). The absolute release showed that the highest absolute amount of phosphate was released from the OS10 scaffold. A dose dependent total release was observed. The lowest amount was released from the OS1 and OS2 samples. The amount in OS5 was two times lower than in the OS10 samples. Interestingly, the cumulative release profile shows, that from the OS1 and OS2 samples, the release was more rapid than from the OS5 and OS10 samples. This indicates that the OS were located near the surface of the fibers, and after 10 days the depletion of OS leads to slower release. In the case of OS5 and OS10, the release was sustained and showed near zero order kinetics. The half-time of release was fastest for the OS2 sample (8 days). OS1 showed a half time of 14.1 days and for the samples with the highest concentration of OS, OS5 and OS10, the half time of release was 23.8 and 23.2 days, respectively. The encapsulation efficiency calculated from total phosphate samples was highest for OS1 and reached 98.2 ± 62.1%. OS2 had lowest encapsulation efficiency reaching only 24.6 ± 10.8%. Samples OS5 and OS10 had 40.1 ± 22.4% and 35.9 ± 0.9% encapsulation efficiency.
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| Fig. 4 Release of phosphate from fibers. Absolute release of phosphate over time (A). Cumulative release of phosphate from fibers (B). | ||
Evaluation of dexamethasone release was problematic due to low concentration of dexamethasone in scaffolds. The maximal concentration of released dexamethasone was between 3.9 (OS1) and 39 ng (OS10). These values are under detection limit of both HPLC22 and UV-Vis methods.23 However, the effect of osteogenic supplements released from scaffolds was tested on model on Saos2 and hMSCs.
The results showed the successful encapsulation of OS to the fibrous structure and sustained release of factors for more than 10 days for OS1 and OS2 and for more than 30 days for OS5 and OS10.
The amount of DNA on scaffolds seeded with Saos2 was evaluated for DNA content (Fig. 5A), cells proliferated on all scaffolds as the amount of DNA was increasing. From day 7 we observed a huge growth of cells on the OS1–10 samples and CGM but on the COM samples cell ingrowth was slower. As Saos2 are normally cultured without OS, it possibly indicates that higher doses of OS work as inhibition agents on the Saos2 osteosarcoma cell line. The results are in agreement with confocal microscopy observation (data not shown).
Metabolic activity measured using an MTS metabolic assay (Fig. 5B) revealed a constant value of absorbance on the COM sample from day 3, although the gradual proliferation of cells was detected. Moreover, only on the OS1 and OS5 samples was the continual increase in absorbance measured. On day 7, we detected the highest absorbance on the OS1 sample. On day 14, statistically higher absorbance was observed on the OS1–2 and –10 samples compared to the CGM and COM. Cells on the OS5 and CGM samples were more metabolically active compared to cells on the COM sample. On day 21, the absorbance detected on the OS1–10 samples were in all cases higher than the rate of absorbance measured on the CGM and COM samples.
Relative expression of type I collagen, an osteogenic marker, was evaluated on days 1, 7 and 14 (Fig. 5C). On day 1, cells on the OS10 sample expressed type I collagen statistically the most of all tested samples. On day 7 the normality test failed, thus one-way Anova on ranks revealed only that type I collagen expression on the OS5 sample was statistically significant in comparison to the COM sample. However, we can observe a trend that not only the OS5 samples induced higher expression but also the OS2 and OS10 samples promoted the expression of type I collagen in comparison to both control groups. On day 14, the highest expression of type I collagen was detected on the OS5 sample, followed by OS2 sample.
The metabolic activity of the cells was measured using an MTS assay (Fig. 7B). The highest absorbance was measured on OS5 on day 1. On the OS2 sample, measured absorbance was higher compared to the CGM. On day 3, metabolic activity was comparable on all samples. On day 7, absorbance was the highest on the COM. On day 14, the highest metabolic activity was measured on the OS10 and CGM samples. There was no difference measured in metabolic activity between the samples on day 21. As OS are standardly added into the hMSC's culture media for induction of osteogenic differentiation we observed no detrimental or strong positive effect of OS, released from scaffolds, on hMSCs proliferation and metabolic activity.
To visualize the adhesion and distribution of hMSC on scaffolds, cells were labeled using fluorescence staining and detected using confocal microscopy and also detected using SEM. As it is visible from Fig. 8, cells adhered on all scaffolds, but the best adhesion was shown on OS5. In the following days of the experiment, cell's density continuously increased. Results correlated well with data from DNA quantification.
qPCR was used to detect the expression of proteins typically associated with osteogenic differentiation. RunX2 was chosen as an early osteogenic marker (Fig. 8B). The highest expression was detected on the OS2 sample on day 1. On day 7, the highest expression was seen on the OS5 and OS10 samples. Last day, day 14, on the COM sample we observed highest expression of mRNA for RunX2. Similar to RunX2, type I collagen was the most expressed on OS2 on day 1 (Fig. 9C). On day 7, the highest expression was seen on the OS5 and OS10 samples. The expression of type I collagen decreased on these samples on day 14, when the most expressed protein was detected on the CGM sample. The expression of osteocalcin (Fig. 8D), the late osteogenic marker, was low, but there were still significant differences between the samples. The highest expression of osteocalcin was detected on the OS5, OS10 and COM samples respectively on day 7 and 14.
To visualize expressed osteocalcin on the samples, protein was stained using immunofluorescence staining and observed using confocal microscopy. Osteocalcin production was very low on day 7 (data not shown) as it is a late marker of osteogenic differentiation. On day 14, osteocalcin was visible mainly on the OS5, OS10 and COM samples (Fig. 6G–L).
However, despite the bio mimicking properties of fibrous scaffolds, the improved osteoinductive properties could be achieved by release of active molecules. Fibrous scaffolds serve as drug delivery systems for encapsulated bioactive compounds and enable prolongation of their bioavailability. A variety of combinations of fibrous scaffolds with bioactive compounds like BMP-2, vascular growth factor or basic fibroblast growth factor was reported.18,31–38 However, use of growth factors is problematic due to their price, stability and lack of medical approval (i.e. by the EMA or FDA). For instance, for bone tissue engineering only two growth factor formulations are approved to date – BMP-2 (Infuse) and BMP-7 (Osigraft).39 Therefore, alternative osteoinductive supplements are applied in bone tissue engineering. Platelets are valuable sources of osteoinductive growth factors and their use as a natural product enable efficient combination with scaffolds for application in bone tissue engineering.18,21,37 In addition, OS were shown to efficiently stimulate osteogenic differentiation of MSCs and stimulate osteogenic cells. Among these molecules, dexamethasone, ascorbic acid, vitamin D3, β-glycerol phosphate and L-proline are the most efficient molecules.
In the current work, we prepared novel 3D scaffolds by centrifugal spinning of a blend containing PCL as a matrix forming polymer and β-glycerol phosphate, ascorbate-2-phosphate and dexamethasone as pro-osteogenic drugs. The technology of blend centrifugal spinning was reported by Mary et al.40 for short term delivery of tetracycline. When used as systems for bone tissue engineering, the scaffolds should be able to release the content for prolonged periods (weeks to months). The centrifugal spinning process enabled the formation of scaffolds with high loading of active molecules. The β-glycerol phosphate was dissolved in concentrations from 40 mg g−1 of PCL to 400 mg g−1 of PCL, ascorbate-2-phosphate in concentrations from 750 μg g−1 of PCL to 7500 μg g−1 of PCL. Dexamethasone was present in low concentrations due to the strong stimulation properties of transcription and potential toxic effect at higher concentration.41 OS were dissolved in PCL solution and processed via centrifugal spinning. The loading of high concentrations of OS shows the low affection of centrifugal spinning via the presence of OS. The mean fiber size for low concentrations was smaller than in the case of plain PCL. This could be connected with the increased conductivity of the polymeric solution. However, in the case of the OS5 sample, the size was significantly higher due to the presence of microfibers. The increase is connected with the increased internal viscosity of the sample caused by the interaction of PCL chains and β-glycerol phosphate. Similarly, the number of pores bigger than 5 μm2 was highest in the OS5 sample. Interestingly, sample OS10 showed a decreased mean fiber diameter and lower presence of pores bigger than 5 μm2. However, the sample contained higher presence of defects indicating that increase of osteogenic additive concentration in OS10 group results in aberrant fiber formation. This could be caused by increased cohesion of polymeric solution and thus lower elongation of emitted polymeric droplet resulting in formation of non-fibrous defects. The results indicated that the blend centrifugal spinning process enables the incorporation of high concentrations of OS without the loss of the fibrous properties of the scaffolds, however the diameter and quality of fibers is decreasing with OS supplement concentration increase.
The presence of OS in the samples was confirmed by FTIR-ATR spectroscopy and RTG analysis of samples in HR-SEM. The infrared spectroscopy identified an increase in bands corresponding to OS, indicating the successful encapsulation of OS. The signal showed dose dependent behavior and with higher concentrations of added OS the signal was stronger. The RTG analysis of elements on the surface of fibers showed that with increased concentrations of drugs in solution, the amount of C decrease and amount of P and O increase. This indicates that O and P from β-glycerol phosphate, dexamethasone and ascorbate-2-phosphate are present in the structure of the scaffold. Nevertheless, the map of spatial distribution of phosphate shows distribution to distinct spots on the fibers. The spots are probably crystals of β-glycerol phosphate formed between PCL chains. The number of spots increases with the concentration of OS and leads to the formation of a connected network of active molecule aggregates. The structure impacts the scaffold's release properties. The internal morphology of the fibers is among the most crucial variables affecting the release kinetics from emulsion nanofibers. As in other nanofiber types, release from osteogenic molecule loaded nanofibers is governed by diffusion or degradation mechanisms.42 The degradation mechanism is dominant in fibers from degradable materials. Upon degradation, the drugs are liberated from the polymeric structure depending on the dissolution of the polymeric matrix.43,44 Since PCL is a slowly degradable material, this type of release is less dominant in the case of our fibers. The release from materials that are non-degradable in the timeframe of drug release is governed by diffusion rate through the polymeric matrix.45 In the case of the proposed scaffolds, the rate limiting factor is the diffusion rate of water and drugs through the polymeric matrix polymer. The rate is dependent on the internal structure of the fibers and the number of contact points available for the solvent to dissolve the core polymer. In the case of fibers with non-continuous islands of active molecule, the release depends on the interconnection of such aggregates.37 The solvent dissolves first, and the aggregates on the surface of the fibers result in rapid release of their cargo. If the droplets are not interconnected or the solvent diffusion is slowed down, the availability of the drug decreases. The lower loading of OS in the OS1 and OS2 samples resulted in a lower number of aggregates along the fibers. However, the release data indicate that most of the drugs containing phosphate, β-glycerol phosphate and ascorbate-2-phosphate, were able to diffuse out of the fiber and 80% of the drug was released on day 31. On the contrary, the structure of the fibers with higher loading (OS5 and OS10) showed numerous contact points on the surface. In the case of aggregate interconnection, the solvent could reach aggregates deeper in the fibers and result in sustained release of high concentrations of OS. The release of OS5 and OS10 fibers was continuous over the release period and a higher total amount of OS was released, as illustrated by the model of measured phosphate release. The fibers were able to release high concentrations of OS over the 31 day period. Nevertheless, the release at day 31 was about 60% and the release rate was constant, without slowing down and achieving release plateau. Therefore, the scaffold seemed to further release the OS even after the release monitoring period. Such long-term releasing system is advantageous for bone tissue engineering applications. A similar microparticle-based system for the delivery of OS was shown to release β-glycerol phosphate for 25 days.11 However, upon incomplete encapsulation, the small molecules due to their high solubility in aqueous solvents often show burst release.12,46 For instance, dexamethasone loaded electrospun PCL scaffolds were able to release dexamethasone for 6 days, however, more than 50% of the drug was released during the first 24 hours. Despite fast release, system was able to stimulate osteogenic differentiation of hMSCs.47 Lower encapsulation rate may be attributed to loss during centrifugal spinning process, where with increased concentration of active molecules, the number of defects and fiber morphology was decreased. Therefore, the non-fibrous defects had different trajectory after emission from spinerete resulting in lower accumulation on collector. This resulted in decreased encapsulation efficiency. However, the non-linearity of encapsulation efficiency still resulted in scaffold formation with different active molecule content.
The fibrous scaffolds with OS were further tested on relevant cell types – the Saos2 osteosarcoma cell line and hMSCs. The test on the Saos2 cell line showed improved proliferation and viability on OS loaded scaffolds compared to control scaffolds both in osteogenic and non-osteogenic medium. Similarly, the scaffolds with OS showed increased production of osteocalcin (protein production increase) and type I collagen (mRNA increase). The indirect immunostaining method of osteocalcin was performed on day 21 on cultivated Saos2 cells. We observed higher doses of osteocalcin on all samples with incorporated OS in comparison to both control groups. Type I collagen showed the highest mRNA expression on samples OS2–OS10, compared to both control groups in the case of cultivated Saos2 cells, meaning that higher doses of OS on the COM sample had a negative effect on the expression of type I collagen in cultured Saos2. The results clearly demonstrated the positive effect of released OS on Saos2 cells.
hMSCs that were seeded on the same scaffolds showed different trends during the culture period. The amount of DNA as well as metabolic activity were comparable for the whole time of the culture period, meaning that the incorporation of OS showed no positive as well as no detrimental effect on cell culture. Those results are in agreement with results obtained by confocal microscopy and SEM observation. Similar results were obtained by Shi et al. who tested the effect of released OS from microspheres on hMSC proliferation. The best cell proliferation was observed on the control group cultivated in growth medium.11 Peter et al.48 confirmed that after rat MSC reached confluency the ongoing exposure of cells to OS had no further positive effect on cell proliferation. However, experiments that study the effect of OS on hMSCs, seeded in lower cell density in comparison to our cell seeding density, indicate the positive effect of OS in culture medium on cell proliferation or metabolic activity,49,50 meaning that in confluent cell layers there are other important factors that mainly affect cell differentiation. However, the results of the study show the osteoinductive properties of the prepared scaffolds. ALP activity was measured on the scaffold cultured with hMSCs to study the effect of released OS on the osteogenic differentiation of hMSCs. The trend in ALP activity of cells cultivated on scaffolds with incorporated OS was slightly lower in comparison to the COM samples, but higher compared to cell cultured in growth medium. Many studies have tested ALP activity in diverse cultivation conditions. However, the complete differentiation medium reaches the best ALP activity in cultured hMSCs.48–50 Expression of mRNA for key osteogenic transcription factor – RunX2 was observed on the OS1–10 scaffolds. hMSCs cultivated on samples marked as OS5 and OS10 reached the peak in expression of mRNA for RunX2 on day 7. A higher amount of expressed mRNA for type I collagen was observed on day 7 on the OS5 and OS10 samples and on day 14 on the CGM sample. In addition, the differentiation into osteogenic lineage was confirmed by the indirect immunostaining method of osteocalcin. On day 14 we observed stained osteocalcin on the OS5, OS10 and COM samples. Thus, we conclude that the presence of OS in higher doses influenced the osteogenic differentiation. Osteocalcin visualization on hMSCs is in agreement with the results obtained by qPCR. These findings again indicated that the OS5, OS10 and COM samples promoted the osteogenic differentiation the most of all tested groups. This means that the incorporation of OS in samples marked as OS5 and OS10 showed a comparable effect to OS freely added into growth medium at the concentration standardly used for the induction of osteogenic differentiation in vitro. Those results are in agreement with the study of Shi et al.11 who observed the highest expression of mRNA for RunX2, type I collagen and osteocalcin on scaffolds releasing OS.
Osteoinductive properties of the centrifugal spun scaffold releasing OS were confirmed in in vivo study. While defects of the control group were filled dominantly with the adipose tissue, cells from surrounding tissues infiltrated the fibrous scaffolds and started to form bone trabecules. Fibers served to cells as a scaffolding material helping them to settle inside the defect and synthetized bone ECM. Bone trabecules were formed preferentially from the side of the defect, what is typical for cell-free scaffolds. OS released from the scaffolds induced osteoinduction, the amount of the bone trabecules was higher compared to PCL fibers without the OS.
The proposed scaffolds showed the osteoinductive properties and show high potential for application in cell-free tissue engineering. The use of the cell-free scaffolds possesses several advantages compared to scaffolds that are seeded with cells prior to implantation into the defect site. The aspiration of cells is connected with an extra surgical procedure that could lead on the donor side to morbidity, pain or inflammation. Moreover, during the ex vivo expansion and cultivation the cells can undergo unwanted phenotypic changes. Thus, cell-free scaffolds designated as drug delivery carriers can induce in the defect cell migration, proliferation and finally differentiation into the desired cell type.16 Besides osteoinductive properties, the scaffolds based on centrifugal spinning technology are highly advantageous in the formation of the real 3D structure of the scaffolds. Classical electrospun scaffolds have limited thickness and pore size, which does not enable rapid cell penetration into the scaffolds.17,51 Centrifugal spinning technology enables the penetration of cells thorough the fibrous scaffold without the need for additional components (i.e. like salt crystals).51 Scaffold porosity is an important property in bone tissue engineering. Generally, pores of a size of less than 100 μm do not favor the ingrowth of mineralized extracellular matrix and also do not support cell migration.52 Optimal pore size for bone tissue engineering ranges from 100–400 μm.53 However, in vivo study where PCL scaffolds with the range of pore diameters from 350–800 μm were tested did not reveal differences in new bone formation.54 In our case, the maximal pore size of the scaffolds was about 200 μm2, which facilitated cell penetration thorough the scaffolds. It was proved in our previous study, where cells cultured in static conditions penetrated into the depth of 80–100 μm.18 In the case of the OS10 sample, the pore size was lower, which may hamper in vivo bone formation using these scaffolds.
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