Blend of natural and
man-made materials works best, study in mice shows
Newswise, May 6, 2016 — To make a good framework for filling
in missing bone, mix at least 30 percent pulverized natural bone with some
special man-made plastic and create the needed shape with a 3-D printer. That’s
the recipe for success reported by researchers at The Johns Hopkins University
in a paper published in ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering.
Each year, the Johns Hopkins scientists say, birth defects, trauma
or surgery leave an estimated 200,000 people in need of replacement bones in
the head or face. Historically, the best treatment required surgeons to remove
part of a patient’s fibula (a leg bone that doesn’t bear much weight), cut it
into the general shape needed and implant it in the right location.
But, according to Warren Grayson, Ph.D., associate professor of biomedical
engineering at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and the report’s
senior author, the procedure not only creates leg trauma but also falls short
because the relatively straight fibula can’t be shaped to fit the subtle curves
of the face very well.
That has led investigators to 3-D printing, or so-called
additive manufacturing, which creates three-dimensional objects from a digital
computer file by piling on successive, ultrathin layers of materials. The
process excels at making extremely precise structures — including anatomically
accurate ones — from plastic, but “cells placed on plastic scaffolds need some
instructional cues to become bone cells,” says Grayson.
“The ideal scaffold is
another piece of bone, but natural bones can’t usually be reshaped very precisely.”
In their experiments, Grayson and his team set out to make a
composite material that would combine the strength and printability of plastic
with the biological “information” contained in natural bone.
They began with polycaprolactone, or PCL, a biodegradable
polyester used in making polyurethane that has been approved by the FDA for
other clinical uses.
“PCL melts at 80 to 100 degrees Celsius (176 to 212
Fahrenheit) — a lot lower than most plastics — so it’s a good one to mix with
biological materials that can be damaged at higher temperatures,” says Ethan
Nyberg, a graduate student on Grayson’s team.
PCL is also quite strong, but the team knew from previous
studies that it doesn’t support the formation of new bone well. So they mixed
it with increasing amounts of “bone powder,” made by pulverizing the porous
bone inside cow knees after stripping it of cells.
“Bone powder contains structural proteins native to the body
plus pro-bone growth factors that help immature stem cells mature into bone
cells,” says Grayson. “It also adds roughness to the PCL, which helps the cells
grip and reinforces the message of the growth factors.”
The first test for the composite materials was printability,
Grayson says. Five, 30 and 70 percent bone powder blends performed well, but 85
percent bone powder had too little PCL “glue” to maintain clear lattice shapes
and was dropped from future experiments.
“It was like a
chocolate chip cookie with too many chocolate chips,” says Nyberg.
To find out whether the scaffolds encourage bone formation,
the researchers added human fat-derived stem cells taken during a liposuction
procedure to scaffolds immersed in a nutritional broth lacking pro-bone
ingredients.
After three weeks, cells grown on 70 percent bone powder
scaffolds showed gene activity hundreds of times higher in three genes
indicative of bone formation, compared to cells grown on pure PCL scaffolds.
Cells on 30 percent bone powder scaffolds showed large but less impressive
increases in the same genes.
After the scientists added the key ingredient
beta-glycerophosphate to the cells’ broth to enable their enzymes to deposit
calcium, the primary mineral in bone, the cells on 30 percent scaffolds
produced about 30 percent more calcium per cell, while those on 70 percent scaffolds
produced more than twice as much calcium per cell, compared to those on pure
PCL scaffolds.
Finally, the team tested their scaffolds in mice with
relatively large holes in their skull bones made experimentally. Without
intervention, the bone wounds were too large to heal.
Mice that got scaffold implants laden with stem cells had new
bone growth within the hole over the 12 weeks of the experiment. And CT scans
showed that at least 50 percent more bone grew in scaffolds containing 30 or 70
percent bone powder, compared to those with pure PCL.
“In the broth experiments, the 70 percent scaffold encouraged
bone formation much better than the 30 percent scaffold,” says Grayson, “but
the 30 percent scaffold is stronger. Since there wasn’t a difference between
the two scaffolds in healing the mouse skulls, we are investigating further to
figure out which blend is best overall.”
Although the use of “decellularized” cow bone has been
FDA-approved for clinical use, in future studies, the researchers say, they hope
to test bone powder made from human bone since it is more widely used
clinically.
They also want to experiment with the designs of the
scaffolds’ interior to make it less geometric and more natural. And they plan
to test additives that encourage new blood vessels to infiltrate the scaffolds,
which will be necessary for thicker bone implants to survive.
Other authors of the report include Ben Hung, Bilal Naved,
Miguel Dias, Christina Holmes, Jennifer Elisseeff and Amir Dorafshar of the
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
This work was supported by the National Institute of Dental
and Craniofacial Research (F31 DE024922), the Russell Military Scholar Award,
the Department of Defense, the Maryland Stem Cell Research Fund and the
American Maxillofacial Surgery Society Research Grant Award.
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