The use of fresh morsellised allograft in impaction bone grafting for revision hip surgery remains the gold standard. Bone marrow contains osteogenic progenitor cells that arise from multipotent mesenchymal stem cells and we propose that in combination with allograft will produce a living composite with biological and mechanical potential. This study aimed to determine if human bone marrow stromal cells (HBMSC) seeded onto highly washed morsellised allograft could survive the impaction process, differentiate and proliferate along the osteogenic lineage and confer biomechanical advantage in comparison to impacted allograft alone. Future work into the development of a bioreactor is planned for the potential safe translation of such a technique into clinical practice.
The ability to generate replacement human tissues on demand is a major clinical need. Indeed the paucity of techniques in reconstructive surgery and trauma emphasize the urgent requirement for alternative strategies for the formation of new tissues and organs. The idea of biomimesis is to abstract good design principles and optimizations from nature and incorporate them in the construction of synthetic materials and structures. Direct appropriation of natural inorganic skeletons is also biomimetic since their unique properties inform us on ways to generate functional, optimized scaffolds. A number of well characterized natural skeletons were investigated as potential scaffolds for tissue regeneration using mesenchymal stem cell populations. Marine sponges, sea urchin skeletons and nacre were found to possess unique functional properties that supported human cell attachment, growth and proliferation and provided organic/ inorganic extracellular matrix analogues for guided tissue regeneration. A good understanding of the processses involved in biomineralisation and the emergence of complex inorganic forms has inspired synthetic strategies for the formation of biological analogues (organised inorganic materials with biological form). We have developed two functional examples of biological structures generated using biomimetic materials chemistry with applications for human tissue regeneration. Mineralised biopoly-saccharide microcapsules provided enclosed micro-environments with an appropriate physical structure and physiological milieu, for the support of the initial stages of tissue regeneration combined with a capacity to deliver human cells, plasmid DNA and controlled release of biological factors such as cytokines. Calcium carbonate porous microspheres analogous to microscopic coccolithophore shells provided a template for tissue formation and a mechanism for the delivery of DNA and functional biological factors. These biomi-metic structures have considerable potential as scaffolds for skeletal repair and regeneration, particularly when combined with inductive and stimulatory biological factors (cytokines, morphogens, signal molecules) and plasmid DNA carrying with them chemical cues that modulate and direct permanent tissue formation complimentary with the host.
Clonal chondrocytes of osteoarthritic (OA) cartilage express an aberrant set of genes. We hypothesize that this aberrant gene expression may be due to clonally inherited epigenetic changes, defined as altered gene expression without changes in genetic sequence. The major epigenetic changes are due to altered DNA methylations in crucial parts of the promoter region. If the cytosines of CpG dinucleotides are methylated, the gene will be silenced, even if the right transcription factors are present. Similarly, de-methylations may activate previously silenced genes. Our aims were to provide ‘proof-of-concept’ data by examining the methylation status of genes in OA vs non-OA chondrocytes. Articular cartilage was obtained a) from the cartilage of fracture-neck-of-femur (#NOF) patients and b) from or around the eroded regions of OA samples. The former was full thickness cartilage, the latter was partially degraded cartilage, which contained mostly clonal chondrocytes as confirmed by histology. The cartilage samples were ground in a freezer mill (Glen Creston, UK) and DNA was extracted with a Qiagen DNeasy maxi kit. To assess DNA methylation status, the genomic DNA was treated overnight with methylation-sensitive restriction enzymes. Cleavage of selected sites was detected by PCR amplifications with primer pairs designed to bracket selected promoter regions. Loss of the PCR band after digestion with the enzymes indicated absence of methylations, whereas presence of the band indicated methylated cytosine. We selected MMP-9 as one of genes that is activated in OA. Transcription of mmp-9 is regulated by a 670 bp sequence at the 5′-end flanking region, which contains 6 CpGs and a further 21 CpGs within the 1.5 kb region further upstream. A PCR primer pair was designed to bracket a 350bp sequence upstream from the transcription start site of mmp-9, which contained four of the six potential methylation sites, cleaved by the methylation-sensitive enzymes AciI and HhaI. DNA from 9 OA patients, 5 #NOF patients and 1 rheumatoid arthritic (RA) patient were digested with HhaI or AciI and examined for the presence or absence of PCR bands. In all patients, digestion with HhaI abolished the PCR band, indicating that the HhaI site was never methylated in either #NOF or OA patients. However, a remarkable difference was found after digestion with AciI: in 8/9 OA patients, the PCR band was no longer detectable, while in 4/5 #NOF patients the PCR band was still present. This suggested that all three AciI cleavage sites were methylated in the majority of chondrocytes from #NOF patients, while at least one of the three AciI cleavage sites was unmethylated in OA patients. Interestingly, the PCR band was present in the RA patient, suggesting methylation of the AciI cleavage sites. The present study provides the first ‘proof-of-concept’ data that suggest epigenetic changes may play a role in the etiology of osteoarthritis. Clearly further work is required to establish the generality of the present findings and whether de-methylations are also found in the promoter regions of other genes that are aberrantly expressed in OA.
Polysaccharide (alginate and chitosan) capsules coated with a unique self-assembled semi-crystalline shell of calcium phosphate provide an enclosed biological system for the spatial and temporal delivery of human cells and bioactive factors. The aim of this study was to demonstrate plasmid DNA entrapment, delivery and transfection of adjacent cells inside capsules, embedded capsules and plated. Bacterial plasmid DNA and/or bone cells (SaOS) was added to solution of sodium alginate solution supplemented with phosphate ions and mixed thoroughly. Alginate droplets were fed through a syringe into a solution of chitosan supplemented with calcium ions. Guest capsules were inserted into soft, pliable host capsules soon after immersion in chitosan solution. Capsules were then immersed in 2mL DMEM 10% FCS in 6-well plastic plates for up to 7 days to enable transfection to occur. Encapsulated bone cells were stained with standard X-Gal to show transfected cells expressing beta-galactosidase. DNA delivery and transfection was demonstrated within capsules containing SaOS cells and plasmid, an admixture of SaOS bone cells and plasmid (51%) and from capsules containing DNA alone suspended in media over plated SaOS one cells. We also demonstrate capsule transfection of encapsulated cells in vivo. Transfection efficiency is highest when plasmid is entrapped and released from embedded capsules followed by plasmid/ SaOS admixture within capsules and lowest efficiency was observed with plated SaOS cells (with a transfection efficiency of 5%). The ability to regulate shell decomposition by manipulating the degree of mineralization and the strength of gelling, and release of capsule contents provides a mechanism for programmed release of gene modulated cells into the biological environment. The beta-galactosidase plasmid was found to be strongly associated with the chitosan/ calcium phosphate shell as shown by ethidium-homodimer-1 staining of encapsulated DNA and this may assist the transfer from gel to cell. Programmed non-viral delivery of genes using biomaterial constructs is an important approach to gene therapy and orchestrated tissue regeneration. These unique biomineralised polysaccharide capsules provide a facile technique, and an enclosed biomimetic micro-environments with specifiable degradation characteristics, for the safe encapsulation and delivery of functional quantities of plasmid DNA with the implicit therapeutic implications therein.
Ex vivo gene transfer of osteogenic factors into multipotential stem cells offers potentially important therapeutic implications in a variety of musculoskeletal diseases. One possible approach is the development of a cellular vehicle, namely bone morphogenetic protein (BMP)-producing bone marrow cells, created using adenoviral gene transfer. These transduced cells provide local delivery of BMP for bone formation. The aims of this study were to study the feasibility of gene transfer to human bone osteoprogenitor cells, using adenoviral vectors. Specifically, the aims were to study the efficacy of transduction with an adenoviral vector expressing BMP-2 and then to determine the ability of the transduced cells to produce active BMP-2 and to generate bone ex vivo. Primary human bone marrow osteoprogenitor cells were expanded in culture and infected with AxCALacZ, a replication-deficient adenoviral vector carrying the To examine whether adenoviral transfection affected the osteoblast phenotype and their ability to mineralise in vitro, adenovirally-transduced bone marrow cells expressing BMP-2 were seeded onto poly(-lactic acid These results indicate the ability to deliver active BMP-2 using human bone marrow osteoprogenitor cells following adenoviral infection. The maintenance of osteoblast phenotype in extended culture and generation of mineralised 3-D scaffolds containing such constructs offers a realistic approach to tissue engineer bone for orthopaedic applications.