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Localized growth factor delivery from microparticles modulates osteogenic and chondrogenic gene expression in a growth factor-dependent manner in an ex vivo chick embryonic bone model

Localized growth factor delivery from microparticles modulates osteogenic and chondrogenic gene expression in a growth factor-dependent manner in an ex vivo chick embryonic bone model
Localized growth factor delivery from microparticles modulates osteogenic and chondrogenic gene expression in a growth factor-dependent manner in an ex vivo chick embryonic bone model
Growth factors play a crucial role in regulating various cellular functions, including proliferation and differentiation. Consequently, the biomaterial-based delivery of exogenous growth factors presents a promising strategy in regenerative medicine to manage the healing process and restore tissue function. For effective therapeutic applications, it is essential that these active compounds are precisely targeted to the site of regeneration, with release kinetics that align with the gradual pace of tissue growth. We have developed an ex vivo model utilizing a developing embryonic chick bone, and using PLGA-based microparticles as controlled-release systems, allowing for the investigation of the spatiotemporal effects of growth factor delivery on cell differentiation and tissue formation. Our findings demonstrate that BMP2 and FGF2 can significantly alter cell morphology and zonally pattern collagen deposition within the model, but only when the growth factor presentation rate is carefully regulated. Furthermore, the growth factor-dependent responses observed underscore the potential of this model to explore interactions between cells and the growth factors released from biomaterials in an approach which can be applied to bone tissue engineering. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Current biomaterial-based strategies for bone tissue engineering face critical limitations in mimicking the spatial and temporal dynamics of native tissue development. This study introduces an innovative ex vivo embryonic chick bone model to evaluate localized, sustained growth factor delivery using PLGA microparticles. By precisely controlling the release of BMP2 and FGF2, the research demonstrates growth factor-specific modulation of osteogenic and chondrogenic gene expression and matrix deposition, outcomes that traditional in vitro models fail to capture. This physiologically relevant platform bridges a critical gap between basic in vitro assays and complex in vivo models, offering a powerful, low-cost tool for preclinical screening of regenerative therapies, and advancing the rational design of next-generation bone healing strategies.
BMP2, Chick embryonic bone, Controlled release, FGF2, Microparticles, PLGA
1742-7061
558-567
Rashidi, Hassan
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Cox, Helen C.
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Qutachi, Omar
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Moulding, Dale
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White, Lisa J.
602fcec7-8f50-4013-af51-0a28f6ff7c93
Smith, Emma L.
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Kanczler, Janos M.
eb8db9ff-a038-475f-9030-48eef2b0559c
Rojo, Luis
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Rotherham, Michael
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Henstock, James R.
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Stevens, Molly M.
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Haj, Alicia J. El
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Oreffo, Richard O.C.
ff9fff72-6855-4d0f-bfb2-311d0e8f3778
Shakesheff, Kevin M
5b9ed879-e2c5-4c62-bb38-abd2bb4960ac
Rose, Felicity R.A.J.
ffeec12e-9182-4466-a719-0627b236cd22
Rashidi, Hassan
902fcded-6f5e-4d82-ae93-aa199a88357d
Cox, Helen C.
f945f592-1117-46fa-b34d-3595e8b280c4
Qutachi, Omar
83d3efa1-3dec-4829-9157-d2b19ef1552c
Moulding, Dale
705d18ac-33db-4576-b848-500adf3156ea
White, Lisa J.
602fcec7-8f50-4013-af51-0a28f6ff7c93
Smith, Emma L.
49c1f35c-4a4a-4e67-853a-795a83361e92
Kanczler, Janos M.
eb8db9ff-a038-475f-9030-48eef2b0559c
Rojo, Luis
16c01f75-b75a-4d17-80bd-5785b388591d
Rotherham, Michael
6d51256a-3543-4fb7-bf0c-93486e1186f7
Henstock, James R.
05418794-7534-498e-bec5-ebdbe0032a86
Stevens, Molly M.
2af17549-764e-4c18-a316-f7dc790398e0
Haj, Alicia J. El
40529e99-8b75-4d0e-b7fe-288c4177e3c3
Oreffo, Richard O.C.
ff9fff72-6855-4d0f-bfb2-311d0e8f3778
Shakesheff, Kevin M
5b9ed879-e2c5-4c62-bb38-abd2bb4960ac
Rose, Felicity R.A.J.
ffeec12e-9182-4466-a719-0627b236cd22

Rashidi, Hassan, Cox, Helen C., Qutachi, Omar, Moulding, Dale, White, Lisa J., Smith, Emma L., Kanczler, Janos M., Rojo, Luis, Rotherham, Michael, Henstock, James R., Stevens, Molly M., Haj, Alicia J. El, Oreffo, Richard O.C., Shakesheff, Kevin M and Rose, Felicity R.A.J. (2025) Localized growth factor delivery from microparticles modulates osteogenic and chondrogenic gene expression in a growth factor-dependent manner in an ex vivo chick embryonic bone model. Acta Biomaterialia, 204, 558-567. (doi:10.1016/j.actbio.2025.08.028).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Growth factors play a crucial role in regulating various cellular functions, including proliferation and differentiation. Consequently, the biomaterial-based delivery of exogenous growth factors presents a promising strategy in regenerative medicine to manage the healing process and restore tissue function. For effective therapeutic applications, it is essential that these active compounds are precisely targeted to the site of regeneration, with release kinetics that align with the gradual pace of tissue growth. We have developed an ex vivo model utilizing a developing embryonic chick bone, and using PLGA-based microparticles as controlled-release systems, allowing for the investigation of the spatiotemporal effects of growth factor delivery on cell differentiation and tissue formation. Our findings demonstrate that BMP2 and FGF2 can significantly alter cell morphology and zonally pattern collagen deposition within the model, but only when the growth factor presentation rate is carefully regulated. Furthermore, the growth factor-dependent responses observed underscore the potential of this model to explore interactions between cells and the growth factors released from biomaterials in an approach which can be applied to bone tissue engineering. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Current biomaterial-based strategies for bone tissue engineering face critical limitations in mimicking the spatial and temporal dynamics of native tissue development. This study introduces an innovative ex vivo embryonic chick bone model to evaluate localized, sustained growth factor delivery using PLGA microparticles. By precisely controlling the release of BMP2 and FGF2, the research demonstrates growth factor-specific modulation of osteogenic and chondrogenic gene expression and matrix deposition, outcomes that traditional in vitro models fail to capture. This physiologically relevant platform bridges a critical gap between basic in vitro assays and complex in vivo models, offering a powerful, low-cost tool for preclinical screening of regenerative therapies, and advancing the rational design of next-generation bone healing strategies.

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Accepted/In Press date: 12 August 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 13 August 2025
Published date: 8 September 2025
Keywords: BMP2, Chick embryonic bone, Controlled release, FGF2, Microparticles, PLGA

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505288
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505288
ISSN: 1742-7061
PURE UUID: 3bbd7623-2101-4dd6-847e-117dcd74abf3
ORCID for Janos M. Kanczler: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7249-0414
ORCID for Richard O.C. Oreffo: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5995-6726

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 06 Oct 2025 16:43
Last modified: 07 Oct 2025 01:41

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Contributors

Author: Hassan Rashidi
Author: Helen C. Cox
Author: Omar Qutachi
Author: Dale Moulding
Author: Lisa J. White
Author: Emma L. Smith
Author: Janos M. Kanczler ORCID iD
Author: Luis Rojo
Author: Michael Rotherham
Author: James R. Henstock
Author: Molly M. Stevens
Author: Alicia J. El Haj
Author: Kevin M Shakesheff
Author: Felicity R.A.J. Rose

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