Hypoxia and Amino Acid Supplementation Synergistically Promote the Osteogenesis of Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells on Silk Protein Scaffolds — Sejuti Sengupta (2010) | RDL Network
Hypoxia and Amino Acid Supplementation Synergistically Promote the Osteogenesis of Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells on Silk Protein Scaffolds
Article 2010 en
Authors
SS
Sejuti Sengupta
SP
Sang‐Hyug Park
AP
Atur Patel
Abstract
1 min read
Tailoring tissue engineering strategies to match patient- and tissue-specific bone regeneration needs offers to improve clinical outcomes. As a step toward this goal, osteogenic outcomes and metabolic parameters were assessed when varying inputs into the bone formation process. Silk protein scaffolds seeded with human mesenchymal stem cells in osteogenic differentiation media were used to study in vitro osteogenesis under varied conditions of amino acid (lysine and proline) concentration and oxygen level. The cells were assessed to probe how the microenvironment impacted metabolic pathways and thus osteogenesis. The most favorable osteogenesis outcomes were found in the presence of low (5%) oxygen combined with high lysine and proline concentrations during in vitro cultivation. This same set of culture conditions also showed the highest glucose consumption, lactate synthesis, and certain amino acid consumption rates. On the basis of these results and known pathways, a holistic metabolic model was derived which shows that lysine and proline supplements as well as low (5%) oxygen levels regulate collagen matrix synthesis and thereby rates of osteogenesis. This study establishes early steps toward a foundation for patient- and tissue-specific matches between metabolism, repair site, and tissue engineering approaches toward optimized bone regeneration.
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