Generation and differentiation of microtissues from multipotent precursor cells for use in tissue engineering.

Fabian Langenbach, Karin Berr, Christian Naujoks, Andrea Hassel, Michael Hentschel, Rita Depprich, Norbert R Kubler, Ulrich Meyer, Hans-Peter Wiesmann, Gesine Kögler, Jörg Handschel

Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Heinrich Heine University Medical Center, Düsseldorf, Germany.

Journal Article: Nature Protocol 11/2011; 6(11):1726-35. DOI: 10.1038/nprot.2011.394

Abstract

This protocol describes an effective method for the production of spherical microtissues (microspheres), which can be used for a variety of tissue-engineering purposes. The obtained microtissues are well suited for the study of osteogenesis in vitro when multipotent stem cells are used. The dimensions of the microspheres can easily be adjusted according to the cell numbers applied in an individual experiment. Thus, microspheres allow for the precise administration of defined cell numbers at well-defined sites. Here we describe a detailed workflow for the production of microspheres using unrestricted somatic stem cells from human umbilical cord blood and adapted protocols for the use of these microspheres in histological analysis. RNA extraction methods for mineralized microtissues are specifically modified for optimum yields. The duration of running the complete protocol without preparatory cell culture but including 2 weeks of microsphere incubation, histological staining and RNA isolation is about 3 weeks.

Source: PubMed

Comments on this publication

ResearchGate members can add comments. Sign up now and post your comment!

Similar publications

Science & Research Jobs

Keywords

2 weeks
 
complete protocol
 
detailed workflow
 
effective method
 
human umbilical cord blood
 
individual experiment
 
microsphere incubation
 
microspheres
 
mineralized microtissues
 
obtained microtissues
 
optimum yields
 
osteogenesis
 
precise administration
 
preparatory cell culture
 
protocols
 
RNA extraction methods
 
RNA isolation
 
spherical microtissues
 
tissue-engineering purposes
 
unrestricted somatic