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Publication : Neural crest-derived cells in nasal conchae of adult mice contribute to bone regeneration.

First Author  Yoshida H Year  2021
Journal  Biochem Biophys Res Commun Volume  554
Pages  173-178 PubMed ID  33798944
Mgi Jnum  J:305561 Mgi Id  MGI:6706011
Doi  10.1016/j.bbrc.2021.03.079 Citation  Yoshida H, et al. (2021) Neural crest-derived cells in nasal conchae of adult mice contribute to bone regeneration. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 554:173-178
abstractText  Neural crest-derived cells (NCDCs), a class of adult stem cells not restricted to embryonic tissues, are attractive tissue regenerative therapy candidates because of their ease of isolation, self-renewing properties, and multipotency. Although adult NCDCs can undergo osteogenic differentiation in vitro, whether they induce bone formation in vivo remains unclear. Previously, our group reported findings showing high amounts of NCDCs scattered throughout nasal concha tissues of adult mice. In the present study, NCDCs in nasal conchae labeled with enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) were collected from adult P0-Cre/CAG-CAT-EGFP double transgenic mice, then cultured in serum-free medium to increase the number. Subsequently, NCDCs were harvested and suspended in type I atelocollagen gel, then an atelocollagen sponge was used as a scaffold for the cell suspension. Atelocollagen scaffolds with NCDCs were placed on bone defects created in a mouse calvarial bone defect model. Over the ensuing 12 weeks, micro-CT and histological analysis findings showed that mice with scaffolds containing NCDCs had slightly greater bone formation as compared to those with a scaffold alone. Furthermore, Raman spectroscopy revealed spectral properties of bone in mice that received scaffolds with NCDCs similar to those of native calvarial bone. Bone regeneration is important not only for gaining bone mass but also chemical properties. These results are the first to show the validity of biomolecule-free adult nasal concha-derived NCDCs for bone regeneration, including the chemical properties of regenerated bone tissue.
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