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Research

PMSC DIFFERENTIATION INDUCED BY MUSCULOSKELETAL MATRIX: IN VITRO STUDY

The International Combined Orthopaedic Research Societies (ICORS), World Congress of Orthopaedic Research, Edinburgh, Scotland, 7–9 September 2022. Part 2 of 3.



Abstract

Periosteal mesenchymal stem cells (PMSC) are an emerging niche of stem cells to enhance bone healing by tissue engineering process. They have to be differentiated into osteoprogenitors in order to synthesize new bone matrix. In vitro differentiation with specific differentiation medium (DM) is not exactly representative of what occurs in vivo. The interaction between PMSC and growth factors (GF) present in biological matrix is somewhat less understood. The goal of this study is to explore the possibility of spontaneous PMSC differentiation in contact with different biological matrices without DM.

500.000 porcine PMSC were seeded on 6-well plates and cultured with proliferation medium (PM). When reaching 80% confluence, biological samples (n=3) of demineralized bone matrix (DBM), decellularized porcine bone allograft (AOp), human bone allograft (AOh), human periosteum (HP) and human fascia lata (HFL) were added. Negative and positive control wells included cells with only PM or DM, respectively. The differentiation progress was assessed by Alizarin Red staining at days 7, 14 and 21. Bone morphogenetic protein content (BMP 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 11) of each sample was also investigated by western blot.

Alizarin red highlighted bone nodules neoformation on wells containing AOp, AOh and DBM, like positive controls. HP and HFL wells did not show any nodules. These results are correlated to a global higher BMP expression profile in AOp than in HP and HFL but not statistically significant (p=0.38 and p>.99, respectively). The highest expression in each tissue was that of BMP2 and BMP7, which play an important role in osteoinduction.

PMSC are well known to participate to bone formation but, despite BMP presence in HP and HFL, they did not permit to achieve osteogenesis alone. The bone contact seems to be essential to induce in vitro differentiation into osteoprogenitors.


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