Bone
is the rigid tissue that constitutes the skeleton. The material
for bone regeneration has to provide the mechanical stability by maintaining
the mechanical loads both in the rest conditions and during the body
movements. Bone is dynamic tissue constantly reshaped by the action
of cells (osteoblasts and osteoclasts). This activity is normally
enough to heal bone injuries; however, in several conditions, when
bone is subjected to fatal damages, self-renewal is difficult, if
not even impossible, and a medical treatment is required. The transplantation
of a biomaterial is one of the common surgical procedures to overcome
critical injuries. In this study, we exploited the effect of the use
of different sources of demineralized bone powder (DBP) in combination
with gellan gum (GG) to form a GG–DBP hydrogel scaffold with
the purpose of regenerating the bone tissue. DBP was extracted from
the femurs of two typologies of Gallus gallus domesticus (the Yeonsan Ogye, a traditional and rare black chicken
from Korea, and the Cornish cross, the most common breeds for industrial
meat production) and the Pekin duck. The composite scaffold has been
tested both in vitro and in vivo. In vitro studies using rat bone marrow-derived
mesenchymal stem cells (rBMSCs) confirmed the cellular suitability
of bone-specific gene expression for seeded GG–DBP scaffolds,
differentiation capacity, and marked upregulation. The scaffold containing
a DBP derived from the Yeonsan Ogye (YO) bone showed higher levels
of cell proliferation and osteogenic differentiation in comparison
with the scaffold with the DBP obtained from the other studied sources.
These results have been related with the higher amount of melanin,
studied by fluorescence, of the YO DBP compared to Cornish cross and
Pekin duck. Overall, this study clearly shows the use of YO DBP as
a promising material in bone tissue regeneration.
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