The fate of cells and subsequent bone regeneration is highly correlated with temporospatial coordination of chemical, biological, or physical cues within a local tissue microenvironment. Deeper understanding of how mammalian cells react to local tissue microenvironment is paramount important when designing next generation of biomaterials for tissue engineering. This study aims to investigate that the regulation of magnesium cationic (Mg<sup>2+</sup>) tissue microenvironment is able to convince early-stage bone regeneration and its mechanism undergoes intramembranous ossification. It was discovered that moderate Mg<sup>2+</sup> content niche (~4.11 mM) led to superior bone regeneration, while Mg<sup>2+</sup>-free and strong Mg<sup>2+</sup> content (~16.44 mM) discouraged cell adhesion, proliferation and osteogenic differentiation, thereby bone formation was rarely found. When magnesium ions diffused into free Mg zone from concentrated zone in late time point, new bone formation on free Mg zone became significant through intramembranous ossification. This study successfully demonstrates that magnesium cationic microenvironment serves as an effective biochemical cue and is able to modulate the process of bony tissue regeneration. The knowledge of how a Mg<sup>2+</sup> cationic microenvironment intertwines with cells and subsequent bone formation gained from this study may provide a new insight to develop the next generation of tissue-repairing biomaterials.
Wenhao Wang, Jie Shen, Yuan Meng, Miaoman Ye, Shaozhang Lin, Qi Zhao, Le Wang, Kmc Cheung, Shuilin Wu, Yufeng Zheng, Xuanyong Liu, Paul Kim Ho Chu, Kwk Yeung, Zhiyong Zhang
Mohammadreza Shokouhimehr, Andrea S. Theus, Archana Kamalakar, Liqun Ning, Cong Cao, Martin L. Tomov, Jarred Kaiser, Steven L. Goudy, Nick J. Willett, Ho Won Jang, Christopher N. LaRock, Philip Hanna, Aron Lechtig, Mohamed Yousef, Janaina Da Silva Martins, Ara Nazarian, Mitchel B. Harris, Morteza Mahmoudi, Vahid Serpooshan
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