Publication

Does making method of alginate hydrogel influence the chondrogenic differentiation of human mesenchymal stem cells?

Schiavi, Jessica
Charif, Naceur
de Isla, Natalia
Bensoussan, Danièle
Stoltz, Jean‐François
Benkirane‐Jessel, Nadia
Huselstein, Céline
Citation
Schiavi, Jessica, Charif, Naceur, de Isla, Natalia, Bensoussan, Danièle, Stoltz, Jean‐François, Benkirane‐Jessel, Nadia, & Huselstein, Céline. (2012). Does Making Method of Alginate Hydrogel Influence the Chondrogenic Differentiation of Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells? Engineering Geology, 4(10B), 110-113. doi: 10.4236/eng.2012.410B028
Abstract
To overcome cartilage injury, strategies have been developed in the last few years based on tissue engineering to rebuild the defects. Cartilage engineering is principally based on three main biological factors: cells (native cells (chondrocytes) or a more primitive ones as mesenchymal stem cells), scaffolds and functionalization factors (growth factors, mechanical stimulation and/or hypoxia). Cartilage tissue engineering strategies generally result in homogeneous tissue structures with little resemblance to native zonal organization of articular cartilage. The main objective of our work concerns the buildup of complex biomaterials aimed at reconstructing biological tissue with three dimensional cells construction for mimicking cartilage architecture. Our strategy is based on structures formation by simple and progressive spraying of mixed alginate hydrogel and human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSC). In this work, the comportment of cells and more precisely their chondrogenic differentiation potential is compared to a traditional making process: the mold. We report here that spraying method allowed to product a scaffold with hMSC that confer a favorable environment for neocartilage construction.
Funder
Publisher
Scientific Research Publishing
Publisher DOI
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Ireland