A 3D bioreactor model to study osteocyte differentiation and mechanobiology under perfusion and compressive mechanical loading
Rindt, Wyonna; Krug, Melanie; Yamada, Shuntaro; Sennefelder, Franziska; Belz, Louisa; Cheng, Wen-Hui; Azeem, Muhammad; Kuric, Martin; Evers, Marietheres; Leich, Ellen; Hartmann, Tanja Nicole; Pereira, Ana Rita; Hermann, Marietta; Hansmann, Jan; Mussoni, Camilla; Ahmad, Taufiq; Yassin, Mohammed Ahmed; Mustafa, Kamal Babikeir Elnour; Ebert, Regina; Jundt, Franziska
Journal article, Peer reviewed
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Date
2024Metadata
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- Department of Clinical Dentistry [532]
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Abstract
Osteocytes perceive and process mechanical stimuli in the lacuno-canalicular network in bone. As a result, they secrete signaling molecules that mediate bone formation and resorption. To date, few three-dimensional (3D) models exist to study the response of mature osteocytes to biophysical stimuli that mimic fluid shear stress and substrate strain in a mineralized, biomimetic bone-like environment. Here we established a biomimetic 3D bone model by utilizing a state-of-art perfusion bioreactor platform where immortomouse/Dmp1-GFP-derived osteoblastic IDG-SW3 cells were differentiated into mature osteocytes. We evaluated proliferation and differentiation properties of the cells on 3D microporous scaffolds of decellularized bone (dBone), poly(L-lactide-co-trimethylene carbonate) lactide (LTMC), and beta-tricalcium phosphate (β-TCP) under physiological fluid flow conditions over 21 days. Osteocyte viability and proliferation were similar on the scaffolds with equal distribution of IDG-SW3 cells on dBone and LTMC scaffolds. After seven days, the differentiation marker alkaline phosphatase (Alpl), dentin matrix acidic phosphoprotein 1 (Dmp1), and sclerostin (Sost) were significantly upregulated in IDG-SW3 cells (p = 0.05) on LTMC scaffolds under fluid flow conditions at 1.7 ml/min, indicating rapid and efficient maturation into osteocytes. Osteocytes responded by inducing the mechanoresponsive genes FBJ osteosarcoma oncogene (Fos) and prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 2 (Ptgs2) under perfusion and dynamic compressive loading at 1 Hz with 5 % strain. Together, we successfully created a 3D biomimetic platform as a robust tool to evaluate osteocyte differentiation and mechanobiology in vitro while recapitulating in vivo mechanical cues such as fluid flow within the lacuno-canalicular network.