Jawbone Grows from Adult Stem Cells
ARLINGTON, Va., Nov. 26, 2003 --- A Whitaker investigator has moved
tissue engineering a step forward by successfully using a single population
of adult stem cells to grow a knob of jawbone as a potential medical
implant.
Associate Professor Jeremy Mao, Ph.D., D.D.S., of the University of
Illinois at Chicago used the stem cells to cultivate both the bony and
cartilage-like elements of a critical part of the ball-and-socket joint
that connects the jaw with the skull at the base of the ear.
Disorders of this temporomandibular joint (TMJ) are a source of pain
and discomfort for about 30 million Americans. Degenerative diseases
of the TMJ can require joint replacement, a procedure hampered by too
few donors, possible rejection by the immune system, and other inherent
complications.
Attempts to produce a tissue-engineered replacment have met with some
measures of success. These have individually seeded bone-shaped scaffolds
with mature bony cells or cartilage-like cells, which then take hold
and grow.
A more realistic approach for joint replacement would be to seed a
scaffold with adult stem cells taken from the patient. These cells would
give rise to cell types responsible for both bone and cartilage tissue.
The cells could be placed in a scaffold to grow into the correct three-dimensional
structure, and then returned to the body as an implant without fear
of triggering an immune response. Mao's study demonstrated that this
approach may, in fact, be possible.
The experiments were conducted in rats, starting with a sample of bone
marrow taken from two animals. The marrow was processed to obtain stem
cells, which were loaded into four polyurethane molds shaped like the
ball part (condyle) of a human temporomandibular joint. In three of
the scaffolds, cells were given chemical treatments to encourage their
growth. The fourth was left untreated as a control. All four scaffolds
were implanted in the back of a mouse and allowed to grow for eight
weeks.
When the tissue-engineered structures were removed from the mouse,
they had developed into condyles with two layers of cartilage- and bone-like
elements, closely resembling the natural tissues. But there is more
to be done.
For one thing, the potential implants had grown a relatively even distribution
of bony cells and cartilage-like cells, raising the question of whether
this or some other proportion of cells is most desirable. Other technical
issues, such as the strength and durability of the engineered tissue,
also must be addressed before medical applications can be considered.
"Nevertheless, the present findings represent a proof of concept
for further development of tissue-engineered mandibular condyles,"
Mao and coauthor Adel Al-Hadlaq, a graduate student, reported in the
Nov. 20 issue of the Biomaterials & Bioengineering Section of the
Journal of Dental Research.
Mao's research was supported, in part, by a 2001 Whitaker Foundation
Biomedical Engineering Research Grant.
Contact:
Frank Blanchard, The Whitaker
Foundation
Jeremy Mao, University of Illinois
at Chicago
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