JOURNAL OF OSAKA DENTAL UNIVERSITY | |
Vol. 42 No. 1 APRIL - 2008 | |
ISSN: 0475-2058 UBIC: 172 | |
SUMMARY |
|
Scaffolds for bone regeneration need a porous structure with appropriate bioabsorbability and the capacity to
guide vascular invasion. We investigated the use of collagen microspheres as a scaffold, focusing on a novel bone formation material
that is used in combination with human mesenchymal stem cells. When human osteoblast-like cells that had been induced for 7 days to differentiate
into bone were transplanted under the periosteum of the skull of nude rats, marked new bone formation was noted after 4 weeks. When human
mesenchymal stem cells were cultured on collagen microspheres under bone differentiation-inducing conditions, marked calcium deposition occurred, confirming
that collagen microspheres have good ability to deposit bone matrix. Collagen microspheres may exhibit this marked osteogenic ability not
only by maintaining the differentiation character of osteoblast-like cells at a high level and promoting bone matrix deposition, but
also by forming a porous structure in which blood vessels can invade spaces between the microspheres. Bone formation materials that combine collagen
microspheres as a scaffold with human mesenchymal stem cells have good osteogenic ability, and should be studied for clinical application. (J Osaka Dent Univ 2008; 42: 9-15)
Key words: Scaffold; Regenerative medicine. |
|
| Volver | |