3D-printed oxygen-releasing scaffolds improve bone regeneration in mice

Ashley L. Farris(Johns Hopkins University), Dennis Lambrechts(Johns Hopkins University), Yuxiao Zhou(Johns Hopkins University), Nicholas Zhang(Johns Hopkins University), Naboneeta Sarkar(Johns Hopkins University), Megan C. Moorer(United States Department of Veterans Affairs), Alexandra N. Rindone(Johns Hopkins University), Ethan L. Nyberg(Johns Hopkins University), Alexander Perdomo‐Pantoja(Johns Hopkins University), S.J. Burris(Johns Hopkins University), Kendall Free(Johns Hopkins University), Timothy F. Witham(Johns Hopkins University), Ryan C. Riddle(United States Department of Veterans Affairs), Warren L. Grayson(Johns Hopkins University)
Biomaterials
December 11, 2021
Cited by 56Open Access
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Abstract

Low oxygen (O2) diffusion into large tissue engineered scaffolds hinders the therapeutic efficacy of transplanted cells. To overcome this, we previously studied hollow, hyperbarically-loaded microtanks (μtanks) to serve as O2 reservoirs. To adapt these for bone regeneration, we fabricated biodegradable μtanks from polyvinyl alcohol and poly (lactic-co-glycolic acid) and embedded them to form 3D-printed, porous poly-ε-caprolactone (PCL)-μtank scaffolds. PCL-μtank scaffolds were loaded with pure O2 at 300–500 psi. When placed at atmospheric pressures, the scaffolds released O2 over a period of up to 8 h. We confirmed the inhibitory effects of hypoxia on the osteogenic differentiation of human adipose-derived stem cells (hASCs and we validated that μtank-mediated transient hyperoxia had no toxic impacts on hASCs, possibly due to upregulation of endogenous antioxidant regulator genes. We assessed bone regeneration in vivo by implanting O2-loaded, hASC-seeded, PCL-μtank scaffolds into murine calvarial defects (4 mm diameters × 0.6 mm height) and subcutaneously (4 mm diameter × 8 mm height). In both cases we observed increased deposition of extracellular matrix in the O2 delivery group along with greater osteopontin coverages and higher mineral deposition. This study provides evidence that even short-term O2 delivery from PCL-μtank scaffolds may enhance hASC-mediated bone tissue regeneration.


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