Recent Patents on Drug Delivery & Formulation

Author(s): Gabriele Ceccarelli, Nora Bloise, Marco Vercellino, Rosalia Battaglia, Lucia Morgante, Maria Gabriella Cusella De Angelis, Marcello Imbriani and Livia Visai

DOI: 10.2174/1872211311307010006

Cite As
In Vitro Osteogenesis of Human Stem Cells by Using a Three-Dimensional Perfusion Bioreactor Culture System: A Review

Page: [29 - 38] Pages: 10

  • * (Excluding Mailing and Handling)

Abstract

Tissue engineering (by culturing cells on appropriate scaffolds, and using bioreactors to drive the correct bone structure formation) is an attractive alternative to bone grafting or implantation of bone substitutes. Osteogenesis is a biological process that involves many molecular intracellular pathways organized to optimize bone modeling. The use of bioreactor systems and especially the perfusion bioreactor, provides both the technological means to reveal fundamental mechanisms of cell function in a 3D environment, and the potential to improve the quality of engineered tissues. In this mini-review all the characteristics for the production of an appropriate bone construct are analyzed: the stem cell source, scaffolds useful for the seeding of pre-osteoblastic cells and the effects of fluid flow on differentiation and proliferation of bone precursor cells. By automating and standardizing tissue manufacture in controlled closed systems, engineered tissues may reduce the gap between the process of bone formation in vitro and subsequent graft of bone substitutes in vivo.

Keywords: Biomaterials, extracellular matrix, induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), mesenchymal stem cells (MSC), osteogenesis, perfusion bioreactor, scaffolds, tissue engineering