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Effect of 3D Scaffold Structure on Osteogenic Differentiation of Human Bone Marrow Stromal Cells

Published

Author(s)

Girish Kumar, Marian F. Young, Carl Simon Jr.

Abstract

3D structural properties of polymeric scaffolds for tissue engineering play a key role in directing osteogenesis. In addition, much work has demonstrated that cell differentiation is sensitive to topology at sizes ranging from nano- to micro- to macroscale. Thus, the effect of different scaffold topologies on differentiation of human bone marrow stromal cells (hBMSCs) has been measured.
Conference Dates
September 22, 2010
Conference Location
Gaithersburg, MD, US
Conference Title
Maryland Stem Cell Research Symposium

Keywords

polymer scaffold, tissue engineering, stem cell, topology, osteogenesis

Citation

Kumar, G. , Young, M. and Simon Jr., C. (2010), Effect of 3D Scaffold Structure on Osteogenic Differentiation of Human Bone Marrow Stromal Cells, Maryland Stem Cell Research Symposium, Gaithersburg, MD, US, [online], https://tsapps.nist.gov/publication/get_pdf.cfm?pub_id=906748 (Accessed March 28, 2024)
Created September 29, 2010, Updated October 12, 2021