Tissue Eng Regen Med.  2024 Dec;21(8):1141-1151. 10.1007/s13770-024-00666-w.

Determining Which Hydrostatic Pressure Regimes Promote Osteogenesis in Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Applied Sciences, Northumbria University, Newcastle-upon-Tyne NE2 1XE, UK
  • 2School of Pharmacy and Bioengineering, Guy Hilton Research Centre, Keele University, Stoke-on-Trent ST4 7QB, UK
  • 3Healthcare Technologies Institute, School of Chemical Engineering, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TH, UK

Abstract

BACKGROUND
Compressive loading of bone causes hydrostatic pressure changes which have been proposed as an osteogenic differentiation stimulus for mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs). We hypothesised that hMSCs are adapted to differentiate only in response to cyclic hydrostatic pressures above critical thresholds of magnitude and frequency which correspond to physiological levels of anabolic bone loading.
METHODS
Using a pneumatic-hydrostatic bioreactor, we applied hydrostatic pressure regimes to human hMSCs in 3D collagen hydrogel cultures for 1 h/day over 28 days to determine which levels of pressure and frequency stimulated osteogenesis in vitro.
RESULTS
Stimulation of the 3D cultures with 0–280 kPa cyclic hydrostatic pressure at 1 Hz resulted in up to 75% mineralisation in the hydrogel (without exogenous growth factors), whilst static culture or variations of the regime with either constant high pressure (280 kPa, 0 Hz), low-frequency (0.05 Hz, 280 kPa) or low-magnitude (70 kPa, 1 Hz) stimulation had no osteogenic effects (\ 2% mineralisation). Nuclear translocation of YAP was observed following cyclic hydrostatic pressure in mature MLO-A5 osteoblasts but not in hMSCs, suggesting that cyclic hydrostatic pressure activates different mechanotransduction pathways in undifferentiated stem cells and committed osteoblasts.
CONCLUSIONS
Hydrostatic pressure is a potent stimulus for differentiating MSC into highly active osteoblasts and may therefore be a versatile tool for translational cell engineering. We have demonstrated that there are minimum levels of force and frequency needed to trigger osteogenesis, i.e. a pressure ‘switch’, which corresponds to the physiological forces experienced by cells in their native mesenchymal niche. The mechanotransduction mechanisms underpinning these effects are the subject of further study.

Keyword

Bioreactor; Hydrostatic pressure; Mesenchymal stem cells; Mechanotransduction; Osteogenesis
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