Many clinical conditions in neurosurgery, orthopedics, and dental surgery require bone regeneration. The indications include bone fracture, trauma, spinal fusion, and dental implantation. Therapies for bone regeneration are various. Some of them are being used clinically and some are currently under preclinical or clinical studies. The therapies include bone grafts, bone morphogenetic protein-2 (BMP-2) protein delivery, stem cell transplantation, and gene delivery. Calcium phosphatebased ceramics, such as hydroxyapatite (HA) and tricalcium phosphate, have been used as bone substitutes, but these materials have poor mechanical performance. Recently, increasing interest has focused on using polymer/ceramic composite materials as bone substitutes to improve mechanical properties and control the biodegradation rate easily [1]. Polymer/ceramic composites have a non-uniform and limited exposure of the ceramics on the scaffolding surface. This is the result of the polymer solution enveloping the ceramic particles during the fabrication process. This problem can be overcome by two methods. One is fabricating polymer/ceramic composites using the gas-foaming method [1]. The other is exposing nano HA particles on the polymer/HA scaffolds acting as nucleation sites for apatite deposition and accelerating the apatite growth rate in a biomimetic coating approach using a simulated body fluid [2]. BMP-2 is one of the most potent growth factors for the induction of bone formation in vivo. The bone formation efficacy of BMP-2 depends on the protein delivery system, because BMPs administered in solution may lose their bioactivity over a short time and do not always exhibit the required efficacy in bone regeneration in vivo. We have developed BMP-2 delivery systems that allow for sustained and localized release of BMP-2 protein by conjugating heparin, a polysaccharide macromolecule that binds directly with BMP-2 and helps to retain BMP-2 activity, to polymer scaffolds [3], gels, or nanoparticles [4]. Stem cell transplantation can also induce bone regeneration. Generally, bone formation by stem cell transplantation requires osteogenic differentiation of the cells prior to transplantation. However, the in vitro osteogenic differentiation requires additional culture periods of 3-4 weeks, during which patients should wait. Recently, we have developed a technology in which stem cells that are not differentiated osteogenically in vitro prior to transplantation extensively regenerate bone in vivo when exogenous BMP-2 is delivered to the transplantation site [5,6]. This method does not require an additional culture period for in vitro osteogenic differentiation and would be valuable for bone regeneration.
키워드
bone regenerationBMPstem cell
저자
Byung-Soo KIM [ School of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Seoul National University ]
한국생물공학회 [The Korean Society for Biotechnology and Bioengineering]
설립연도
1984
분야
공학>생물공학
소개
이 법인은 생물 공학의 발전과 보급에 이바지하고, 회원 상호 간의 연구 협력과 친목을 도모함을 목적으로 한다
1. 생물공학 분야의 발전을 위한 연구 협력
2. 생물공학의 실용화를 촉진시키기 위한 산학 협동
3. 학술연구 발표회, 강연회, 연수회 등 학술활동의 개최
4. 국,영문 학술지,소식지,학술회의 Proceedings 및 학술도서의 발간
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