Magazine Article

Effects of Bone Morphogenic Proteins on Engineered Cartilage

TBMG-2202

09/01/2007

Abstract
Content

A report describes experiments on the effects of bone morphogenic proteins (BMPs) on engineered cartilage grown in vitro. In the experiments, bovine calf articular chondrocytes were seeded onto biodegradable polyglycolic acid scaffolds and cultured in, variously, a control medium or a medium supplemented with BMP-2, BMP-12, or BMP-13 in various concentrations. Under all conditions investigated, cell-polymer constructs cultivated for 4 weeks macroscopically and histologically resembled native cartilage. At a concentration of 100 ng/mL, BMP-2, BMP-12, or BMP-13 caused (1) total masses of the constructs to exceed those of the controls by 121, 80, or 62 percent, respectively; (2) weight percentages of glycosaminoglycans in the constructs to increase by 27, 18, or 15, respectively; and (3) total collagen contents of the constructs to decrease to 63, 89, or 83 percent of the control values, respectively. BMP-2, but not BMP-12 or BMP-13, promoted chondrocyte hypertrophy.

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Citation
"Effects of Bone Morphogenic Proteins on Engineered Cartilage," Mobility Engineering, September 1, 2007.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Sep 1, 2007
Product Code
TBMG-2202
Content Type
Magazine Article
Language
English