French ⋅ German ⋅ Italian ⋅ Portuguese ⋅ Russian ⋅ Spanish ⋅ Japanese  

  
  Home  |  Top News  |  Most Popular  |  Video  |  Multimedia  |  News Feeds
  Medicine  |  Nature & Earth  |  Biology  |  Technology & Engineering  |  Space & Planetary  |  Psychology  |  Physics & Chemistry  |  Economics  |  Archaeology
Researchers Inject Nanofiber Spheres Carrying Cells into Wounds to Grow Tissue
Published: April 18, 2011.  by  University of Michigan

ANN ARBOR, Mich.---For the first time, scientists have made star-shaped, biodegradable polymers that can self-assemble into hollow, nanofiber spheres, and when the spheres are injected with cells into wounds, these spheres biodegrade, but the cells live on to form new tissue.

Related Content
External link to University of Michigan
More news from University of Michigan

Developing this nanofiber sphere as a cell carrier that simulates the natural growing environment of the cell is a very significant advance in tissue repair, says Peter Ma, professor at the University of Michigan School of Dentistry and lead author of a paper about the research scheduled for advanced online publication in Nature Materials. Co-authors are Xiaohua Liu and Xiaobing Jin.

Repairing tissue is very difficult and success is extremely limited by a shortage of donor tissue, says Ma, who also has an appointment at the U-M College of Engineering. The procedure gives hope to people with certain types of cartilage injuries for which there aren't good treatments now. It also provides a better alternative to ACI, which is a clinical method of treating cartilage injuries where the patient's own cells are directly injected into the patient's body. The quality of the tissue repair by the ACI technique isn't good because the cells are injected loosely and are not supported by a carrier that simulates the natural environment for the cells, Ma says.

To repair complex or oddly shaped tissue defects, an injectable cell carrier is desirable to achieve accurate fit and to minimize surgery, he says. Ma's lab has been working on a biomimetic strategy to design a cell matrix---a system that copies biology and supports the cells as they grow and form tissue---using biodegradable nanofibers.

Ma says the nanofibrous hollow microspheres are highly porous, which allows nutrients to enter easily, and they mimic the functions of cellular matrix in the body. Additionally, the nanofibers in these hollow microspheres do not generate much degradation byproducts that could hurt the cells, he says.

The nanofibrous hollow spheres are combined with cells and then injected into the wound. When the nanofiber spheres, which are slightly bigger than the cells they carry, degrade at the wound site, the cells they are carrying have already gotten a good start growing because the nanofiber spheres provide an environment in which the cells naturally thrive.

This approach has been more successful than the traditional cell matrix currently used in tissue growth, he says. Until now, there has been no way to make such a matrix injectable so it's not been used to deliver cells to complex-shaped wounds.

During testing, the nanofiber repair group grew as much as three to four times more tissue than the control group, Ma says. The next step is to see how the new cell carrier works in larger animals and eventually in people to repair cartilage and other tissue types.





Show Footnotes »

Back to summary page »

Translate this page: Chinese French German Italian Japanese Korean Portuguese Russian Spanish

Related Articles »
Cells 
12/24/12 
Understanding Cell Organization to Tackle Cancer
University of Manchester
Scientists at The University of Manchester have identified how cells know which way up they need to be. The discovery could help in the fight against cancer because in the early stages of the disease the cells become disorganised. …
Growth 
12/17/12 

To Revert Breast Cancer Cells, Give Them the Squeeze
University of California - Berkeley
Jaml 
9/2/10 
Scientists Discover the Mechanisms And Function of a Type of Mysterious Immune Cell
Scripps Research Institute
LA JOLLA, CA – August 31, 2010 –– In two closely related studies, two teams of Scripps Research Institute scientists have discovered the underlying mechanisms that activate a type of immune cell in the skin and other organs. The …
Move 
3/11/10 
Human Cells Exhibit Foraging Behavior Like Amoebae And Bacteria
Vanderbilt University
When cells move about in the body, they follow a complex pattern similar to that which amoebae and bacteria use when searching for food, a team of Vanderbilt researchers have found. …
Yee 
3/5/12 
Study Shows Advance in Using Patients' Own Tumor-fighting Cells to Knock Back Advanced Melanoma
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
A small, early-phase clinical trial to test the effectiveness of treating patients with advanced melanoma using billions of clones of their own tumor-fighting cells combined with a specific type of chemotherapy has shown that the approach has promise. One …
Cell 
11/29/12 
Study Sheds Light on How Pancreatic Cancer Begins
University of California - San Diego
A diagnosis of pancreatic cancer is particularly devastating since the prognosis for recovery is usually poor, with the cancer most often not detected until late stages. …
Mir-200c 
9/8/10 
Micro-RNA Determines Malignancy of Lung Cancer
Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres
Cancer becomes life-threatening when tumor cells start leaving their primary site. They travel through the lymph and blood streams to other tissues where they grow into metastases. This transition to malignancy is associated with characteristic changes in the cancer …
Sharp 
3/18/11 
Enzyme Can Steer Cells Or Possibly Stop Them in Their Tracks
Albert Einstein College of Medicine
March 17, 2011 — (BRONX, NY) — Researchers at Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University have discovered that members of an enzyme family found in humans and throughout the plant and animal kingdoms play a crucial role …
More » 
Most Popular - Medicine »
BREASTFEEDING »
Can Breastfeeding Protect Against ADHD?
MIZ-1 »
Possible Treatment for Serious Blood Cancer
A single antibody could be the key to treating multiple myeloma, or cancer of the blood, currently without cure or long-term treatment. "We tested the antibody in various …
INFECTIONS »
CLABSI Prevention Efforts Result in Up to 200,000 Infections Prevented in Intensive Care Units
CHICAGO (May 13, 2013) – New research from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that as many as 200,000 central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSIs) have been …
HDL »
Jekyll into Hyde: Breathing Auto Emissions Turns HDL Cholesterol from 'Good' to 'Bad'
Academic researchers have found that breathing motor vehicle emissions triggers a change in high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, altering its cardiovascular protective qualities so that it actually contributes to clogged …
ADHD »
Long-term ADHD Treatment Increases Brain Dopamine Transporter Levels, May Affect Drug Efficacy
Long-term treatment of attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) with certain stimulant medications may alter the density of the dopamine transporter, according to research published May 15 in the open access …
ScienceNewsline.com  |  About  |  Privacy Policy  |  Feedback  |  Mobile
All contents are copyright of their owners except U.S. Government works. U.S. Government works are assumed to be in the public domain unless otherwise noted. Everything else copyright ScienceNewsline.com.