Runx2-Genetically Engineered Skeletal Myoblasts for Bone Tissue Engineering

Bone tissue engineering is a promising approach to address the limitations of currently used bone tissue substitutes. However, an optimal cell source for the production of osteoblastic matrix proteins and mineral deposition has yet to be defined. In response to this deficiency, ex vivo gene therap...

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Main Author: Gersbach, Charles Alan
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/11600
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-116002013-01-07T20:14:36ZRunx2-Genetically Engineered Skeletal Myoblasts for Bone Tissue EngineeringGersbach, Charles AlanCell therapyRegenerative medicineGene therapyGenetic engineeringTissue engineeringBone repairBone tissue engineering is a promising approach to address the limitations of currently used bone tissue substitutes. However, an optimal cell source for the production of osteoblastic matrix proteins and mineral deposition has yet to be defined. In response to this deficiency, ex vivo gene therapy of easily accessible non-osteogenic cells, such as skeletal myoblasts, has become a prevalent strategy for inducing an osteoblastic phenotype. The majority of these approaches focus on constitutive overexpression of soluble osteogenic growth factors such as bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs). In order to avoid aberrant effects of unregulated growth factor secretion, this work focuses on delivery of the osteoblastic transcription factor Runx2 as an autocrine osteogenic signal under the control of an inducible expression system. The overall objective of this research was to engineer an inducible cell source for bone tissue engineering that addresses the limitations of current cell-based approaches to orthopedic regeneration. Our central hypothesis was that inducible Runx2 overexpression in skeletal myoblasts would stimulate differentiation into a regulated osteoblastic phenotype. We have demonstrated that Runx2 overexpression stimulates transdifferentiation of primary skeletal myoblasts into a mineralizing osteoblastic phenotype. Furthermore, we have established Runx2-engineered skeletal myoblasts as a potent cell source for bone tissue engineering applications in vitro and in vivo, similar to BMP-2-overexpressing controls. Finally, we exogenously regulated osteoblastic differentiation by myoblasts engineered to express a tetracycline-inducible Runx2 transgene. This conversion into an osteoblastic phenotype was inducible, repressible, recoverable after suppression, and dose-dependent with tetracycline concentration. This work is significant because it addresses cell sourcing limitations of bone tissue engineering, develops controlled and effective gene therapy methods for orthopedic regeneration, and establishes a novel strategy for regulating the magnitude and kinetics of osteoblastic differentiation.Georgia Institute of Technology2006-09-01T19:37:53Z2006-09-01T19:37:53Z2006-07-10Dissertation8506930 bytesapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/11600en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Cell therapy
Regenerative medicine
Gene therapy
Genetic engineering
Tissue engineering
Bone repair
spellingShingle Cell therapy
Regenerative medicine
Gene therapy
Genetic engineering
Tissue engineering
Bone repair
Gersbach, Charles Alan
Runx2-Genetically Engineered Skeletal Myoblasts for Bone Tissue Engineering
description Bone tissue engineering is a promising approach to address the limitations of currently used bone tissue substitutes. However, an optimal cell source for the production of osteoblastic matrix proteins and mineral deposition has yet to be defined. In response to this deficiency, ex vivo gene therapy of easily accessible non-osteogenic cells, such as skeletal myoblasts, has become a prevalent strategy for inducing an osteoblastic phenotype. The majority of these approaches focus on constitutive overexpression of soluble osteogenic growth factors such as bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs). In order to avoid aberrant effects of unregulated growth factor secretion, this work focuses on delivery of the osteoblastic transcription factor Runx2 as an autocrine osteogenic signal under the control of an inducible expression system. The overall objective of this research was to engineer an inducible cell source for bone tissue engineering that addresses the limitations of current cell-based approaches to orthopedic regeneration. Our central hypothesis was that inducible Runx2 overexpression in skeletal myoblasts would stimulate differentiation into a regulated osteoblastic phenotype. We have demonstrated that Runx2 overexpression stimulates transdifferentiation of primary skeletal myoblasts into a mineralizing osteoblastic phenotype. Furthermore, we have established Runx2-engineered skeletal myoblasts as a potent cell source for bone tissue engineering applications in vitro and in vivo, similar to BMP-2-overexpressing controls. Finally, we exogenously regulated osteoblastic differentiation by myoblasts engineered to express a tetracycline-inducible Runx2 transgene. This conversion into an osteoblastic phenotype was inducible, repressible, recoverable after suppression, and dose-dependent with tetracycline concentration. This work is significant because it addresses cell sourcing limitations of bone tissue engineering, develops controlled and effective gene therapy methods for orthopedic regeneration, and establishes a novel strategy for regulating the magnitude and kinetics of osteoblastic differentiation.
author Gersbach, Charles Alan
author_facet Gersbach, Charles Alan
author_sort Gersbach, Charles Alan
title Runx2-Genetically Engineered Skeletal Myoblasts for Bone Tissue Engineering
title_short Runx2-Genetically Engineered Skeletal Myoblasts for Bone Tissue Engineering
title_full Runx2-Genetically Engineered Skeletal Myoblasts for Bone Tissue Engineering
title_fullStr Runx2-Genetically Engineered Skeletal Myoblasts for Bone Tissue Engineering
title_full_unstemmed Runx2-Genetically Engineered Skeletal Myoblasts for Bone Tissue Engineering
title_sort runx2-genetically engineered skeletal myoblasts for bone tissue engineering
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/11600
work_keys_str_mv AT gersbachcharlesalan runx2geneticallyengineeredskeletalmyoblastsforbonetissueengineering
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