Characterization of bone marrow and Wharton's jelly mesenchymal stromal cells response on multilayer braided silk and silk/PLCL scaffolds for ligament tissue engineering

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Abstract

(1) Background: A suitable scaffold with adapted mechanical and biological properties for ligament tissue engineering is still missing. (2) Methods: Different scaffold configurations were characterized in terms of morphology and a mechanical response, and their interactions with two types of stem cells (Wharton's jelly mesenchymal stromal cells (WJ-MSCs) and bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells (BM-MSCs)) were assessed. The scaffold configurations consisted of multilayer braids with various number of silk layers (n = 1, 2, 3), and a novel composite scaffold made of a layer of copoly(lactic acid-co-(e-caprolactone)) (PLCL) embedded between two layers of silk. (3) Results: The insertion of a PLCL layer resulted in a higher porosity and better mechanical behavior compared with pure silk scaffold. The metabolic activities of both WJ-MSCs and BM-MSCs increased from day 1 to day 7 except for the three-layer silk scaffold (S3), probably due to its lower porosity. Collagen I (Col I), collagen III (Col III) and tenascin-c (TNC) were expressed by both MSCs on all scaffolds, and expression of Col I was higher than Col III and TNC. (4) Conclusions: the silk/PLCL composite scaffolds constituted the most suitable tested configuration to support MSCs migration, proliferation and tissue synthesis towards ligament tissue engineering.

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Liu, X., Baldit, A., Brosses, E. de, Velard, F., Cauchois, G., Chen, Y., … Laurent, C. (2020). Characterization of bone marrow and Wharton’s jelly mesenchymal stromal cells response on multilayer braided silk and silk/PLCL scaffolds for ligament tissue engineering. Polymers, 12(9). https://doi.org/10.3390/POLYM12092163

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