Purpose: The aim of this study was to design, develop and validate a simple, compact bioreactor system for tissue engineering. The resulting bioreactor was designed to achieve ease-of-use and low costs for automated cell-culturing procedures onto three-dimensional scaffolds under controlled torsion/ traction regimes. Methods: Highly porous poly-caprolactone-based scaffolds were used as substrates colonized by fibroblast cells (3T3 cell line). Constructs were placed within the cylindrical culture chamber, clumped at the ends and exposed to controlled sequences of torsional stimuli (forward/back-forward sequential cycles of 100° from neutral position at a rate of 600°/min) through a stepper-motor; working settings were defined via PC by an easy user-interface. Cell adhesion, morphology, cytoskeletal fiber orientation and gene expression of extracellular matrix proteins (collagen type I, tenascin C, collagen type III) were evaluated after three days of torsional stimulation in the bioreactor system. Results and Conclusions: The 3D bioreactor system was validated in terms of sterility, experimental reproducibility and flexibility. Cells adhered well onto the polymeric scaffolds. Collagen type I, tenascin C and collagen type III gene expression were significantly up-regulated when cells were cultured under torsion in the bioreactor for three days. In conclusion, we have developed a simple, efficient and versatile 3D cell-culture system to engineer ligament grafts. This system can be used either as a model to investigate mechanisms of tissue development or as a graft manufacturing system for possible clinical use in the field of regenerative medicine.

A three-dimensional traction/torsion bioreactor system for tissue engineering

S Scaglione;
2010

Abstract

Purpose: The aim of this study was to design, develop and validate a simple, compact bioreactor system for tissue engineering. The resulting bioreactor was designed to achieve ease-of-use and low costs for automated cell-culturing procedures onto three-dimensional scaffolds under controlled torsion/ traction regimes. Methods: Highly porous poly-caprolactone-based scaffolds were used as substrates colonized by fibroblast cells (3T3 cell line). Constructs were placed within the cylindrical culture chamber, clumped at the ends and exposed to controlled sequences of torsional stimuli (forward/back-forward sequential cycles of 100° from neutral position at a rate of 600°/min) through a stepper-motor; working settings were defined via PC by an easy user-interface. Cell adhesion, morphology, cytoskeletal fiber orientation and gene expression of extracellular matrix proteins (collagen type I, tenascin C, collagen type III) were evaluated after three days of torsional stimulation in the bioreactor system. Results and Conclusions: The 3D bioreactor system was validated in terms of sterility, experimental reproducibility and flexibility. Cells adhered well onto the polymeric scaffolds. Collagen type I, tenascin C and collagen type III gene expression were significantly up-regulated when cells were cultured under torsion in the bioreactor for three days. In conclusion, we have developed a simple, efficient and versatile 3D cell-culture system to engineer ligament grafts. This system can be used either as a model to investigate mechanisms of tissue development or as a graft manufacturing system for possible clinical use in the field of regenerative medicine.
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/239875
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 14
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact