Establishment of Cocultures of Osteoblasts, Schwann Cells, and Neurons towards a Tissue-Engineered Approach for Orofacial Reconstruction

In orofacial reconstruction not only the osseous structures themselves but also neighboring cranial nerves need to be regenerated. To replace autologous bone implants, biocompatible tissue-engineered scaffolds are under investigation at least for bone replacement but until now these studies have not...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kirsten Haastert, Nicole Semmler, Maike Wesemann, Martin Rücker, Nils-Claudius Gellrich, Claudia Grothe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2006-09-01
Series:Cell Transplantation
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3727/000000006783981512
id doaj-d9069ee2244844ffa083b29f1d593ccd
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d9069ee2244844ffa083b29f1d593ccd2020-11-25T02:48:08ZengSAGE PublishingCell Transplantation0963-68971555-38922006-09-011510.3727/000000006783981512Establishment of Cocultures of Osteoblasts, Schwann Cells, and Neurons towards a Tissue-Engineered Approach for Orofacial ReconstructionKirsten Haastert0Nicole Semmler1Maike Wesemann2Martin Rücker3Nils-Claudius Gellrich4Claudia Grothe5 Center of Systems Neuroscience (ZSN) Hannover, Hannover, Germany Department of Neuroanatomy, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany Department of Neuroanatomy, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany Center of Systems Neuroscience (ZSN) Hannover, Hannover, GermanyIn orofacial reconstruction not only the osseous structures themselves but also neighboring cranial nerves need to be regenerated. To replace autologous bone implants, biocompatible tissue-engineered scaffolds are under investigation at least for bone replacement but until now these studies have not focused on parallel reconstruction of injured cranial nerves. The present study contributes to the development of optimized tissue-engineered products that will enable regeneration of both bone and nervous tissue. For the first time, cocultures of primary osteoblasts (rat or human) and primary Schwann cells (rat or human) were established. The suitability of monocultures of osteoblasts and cocultures of osteoblasts plus Schwann cells as substrate for sensory neurons as well as motoneurons was tested here. The results suggest that whereas osteoblasts provide a good substrate for sensory neurons, motoneurons depend on the presence of Schwann cells for survival and neurite outgrowth. For prolonged availability of regeneration-promoting growth factors at the site of the graft, those proteins should be delivered by the transplanted cells themselves. To enable this, we established electroporation-based nonviral transfection of osteoblasts as well as Schwann cells. Our new cell culture system will enable investigations of the effect of graft-derived growth factors on osteoblasts and Schwann cells as well as on neurite outgrowth from cocultured neurons of the sensory and motor system.https://doi.org/10.3727/000000006783981512
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kirsten Haastert
Nicole Semmler
Maike Wesemann
Martin Rücker
Nils-Claudius Gellrich
Claudia Grothe
spellingShingle Kirsten Haastert
Nicole Semmler
Maike Wesemann
Martin Rücker
Nils-Claudius Gellrich
Claudia Grothe
Establishment of Cocultures of Osteoblasts, Schwann Cells, and Neurons towards a Tissue-Engineered Approach for Orofacial Reconstruction
Cell Transplantation
author_facet Kirsten Haastert
Nicole Semmler
Maike Wesemann
Martin Rücker
Nils-Claudius Gellrich
Claudia Grothe
author_sort Kirsten Haastert
title Establishment of Cocultures of Osteoblasts, Schwann Cells, and Neurons towards a Tissue-Engineered Approach for Orofacial Reconstruction
title_short Establishment of Cocultures of Osteoblasts, Schwann Cells, and Neurons towards a Tissue-Engineered Approach for Orofacial Reconstruction
title_full Establishment of Cocultures of Osteoblasts, Schwann Cells, and Neurons towards a Tissue-Engineered Approach for Orofacial Reconstruction
title_fullStr Establishment of Cocultures of Osteoblasts, Schwann Cells, and Neurons towards a Tissue-Engineered Approach for Orofacial Reconstruction
title_full_unstemmed Establishment of Cocultures of Osteoblasts, Schwann Cells, and Neurons towards a Tissue-Engineered Approach for Orofacial Reconstruction
title_sort establishment of cocultures of osteoblasts, schwann cells, and neurons towards a tissue-engineered approach for orofacial reconstruction
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Cell Transplantation
issn 0963-6897
1555-3892
publishDate 2006-09-01
description In orofacial reconstruction not only the osseous structures themselves but also neighboring cranial nerves need to be regenerated. To replace autologous bone implants, biocompatible tissue-engineered scaffolds are under investigation at least for bone replacement but until now these studies have not focused on parallel reconstruction of injured cranial nerves. The present study contributes to the development of optimized tissue-engineered products that will enable regeneration of both bone and nervous tissue. For the first time, cocultures of primary osteoblasts (rat or human) and primary Schwann cells (rat or human) were established. The suitability of monocultures of osteoblasts and cocultures of osteoblasts plus Schwann cells as substrate for sensory neurons as well as motoneurons was tested here. The results suggest that whereas osteoblasts provide a good substrate for sensory neurons, motoneurons depend on the presence of Schwann cells for survival and neurite outgrowth. For prolonged availability of regeneration-promoting growth factors at the site of the graft, those proteins should be delivered by the transplanted cells themselves. To enable this, we established electroporation-based nonviral transfection of osteoblasts as well as Schwann cells. Our new cell culture system will enable investigations of the effect of graft-derived growth factors on osteoblasts and Schwann cells as well as on neurite outgrowth from cocultured neurons of the sensory and motor system.
url https://doi.org/10.3727/000000006783981512
work_keys_str_mv AT kirstenhaastert establishmentofcoculturesofosteoblastsschwanncellsandneuronstowardsatissueengineeredapproachfororofacialreconstruction
AT nicolesemmler establishmentofcoculturesofosteoblastsschwanncellsandneuronstowardsatissueengineeredapproachfororofacialreconstruction
AT maikewesemann establishmentofcoculturesofosteoblastsschwanncellsandneuronstowardsatissueengineeredapproachfororofacialreconstruction
AT martinrucker establishmentofcoculturesofosteoblastsschwanncellsandneuronstowardsatissueengineeredapproachfororofacialreconstruction
AT nilsclaudiusgellrich establishmentofcoculturesofosteoblastsschwanncellsandneuronstowardsatissueengineeredapproachfororofacialreconstruction
AT claudiagrothe establishmentofcoculturesofosteoblastsschwanncellsandneuronstowardsatissueengineeredapproachfororofacialreconstruction
_version_ 1724749685003911168