Stimulating Bone Growth in the Lab
ARLINGTON, Va., Oct. 16, 2002—A faint pulse of liquid may
provide enough mechanical stimulation to grow solid bone outside
the body, researchers report.
A major challenge to growing bone for transplant is mimicking conditions
inside the body, such as the natural stresses and strains that challenge
bone to grow strong.
In the Oct. 1 issue of Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences a group led by Whitaker investigator Antonios Mikos,
Ph.D., of Rice University reported that even a modest flow rate
has far-reaching effects on the development of a solid, three-dimensional
bone structure.
"Researchers have used fluid flow to stimulate bone growth before,
but no one has looked at its effects on three-dimensional cultures
that have been subjected to continuous stimulation for several days,"
Mikos said.
His group put immature bone cells (osteoblasts) from rats into
small Plexiglas chambers filled with a scaffold of titanium mesh.
After the cells attached to the mesh, a liquid rich in growth factors
and other nutrients was pumped through the chambers for 16 days.
For comparison, the researchers left a second group of cells in
a stagnant pool of nutrients.
"We found that even the lowest flow rate produced a significant
increase in the formation of mineralized bone," Mikos said.
"Moreover, the mineralized bone that formed in samples subjected
to flow was thick and well-developed, similar to what we find in
natural bone. The bone matrix formed by the static samples was thin
and brittle."
More studies are needed to determine the exact flow rate needed
to produce the strongest, healthiest bone possible.
The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health
and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Mikos's earlier
work in cell and tissue engineering was supported by a research
grant from The Whitaker Foundation.
Contact:
Antonios Mikos, Rice University
Frank Blanchard, Whitaker Foundation
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