School of Mathematical Sciences, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia; ARC Centre of Excellence for Mathematical and Statistical Frontiers, QUT, Australia.
Department of Engineering Science, University of Auckland, Auckland 1142, New Zealand.
J Theor Biol. 2021 Nov 7;528:110852. doi: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2021.110852. Epub 2021 Aug 3.
Tissue growth in three-dimensional (3D) printed scaffolds enables exploration and control of cell behaviour in more biologically realistic geometries than that allowed by traditional 2D cell culture. Cell proliferation and migration in these experiments have yet to be explicitly characterised, limiting the ability of experimentalists to determine the effects of various experimental conditions, such as scaffold geometry, on cell behaviour. We consider tissue growth by osteoblastic cells in melt electro-written scaffolds that comprise thin square pores with sizes that were deliberately increased between experiments. We collect highly detailed temporal measurements of the average cell density, tissue coverage, and tissue geometry. To quantify tissue growth in terms of the underlying cell proliferation and migration processes, we introduce and calibrate a mechanistic mathematical model based on the Porous-Fisher reaction-diffusion equation. Parameter estimates and uncertainty quantification through profile likelihood analysis reveal consistency in the rate of cell proliferation and steady-state cell density between pore sizes. This analysis also serves as an important model verification tool: while the use of reaction-diffusion models in biology is widespread, the appropriateness of these models to describe tissue growth in 3D scaffolds has yet to be explored. We find that the Porous-Fisher model is able to capture features relating to the cell density and tissue coverage, but is not able to capture geometric features relating to the circularity of the tissue interface. Our analysis identifies two distinct stages of tissue growth, suggests several areas for model refinement, and provides guidance for future experimental work that explores tissue growth in 3D printed scaffolds.
三维(3D)打印支架中的组织生长使细胞行为的探索和控制能够在比传统 2D 细胞培养更具有生物真实性的几何形状中进行。这些实验中细胞的增殖和迁移尚未被明确描述,限制了实验人员确定各种实验条件(例如支架几何形状)对细胞行为的影响的能力。我们考虑了在熔融电写入支架中由成骨细胞进行的组织生长,这些支架包含尺寸故意在实验之间增加的薄正方形孔。我们收集了关于平均细胞密度、组织覆盖度和组织几何形状的高度详细的时间测量数据。为了根据潜在的细胞增殖和迁移过程来量化组织生长,我们引入并校准了一个基于多孔费希尔反应扩散方程的机械数学模型。通过轮廓似然分析进行参数估计和不确定性量化,揭示了不同孔径之间细胞增殖率和稳态细胞密度的一致性。这种分析还可以作为一个重要的模型验证工具:尽管反应扩散模型在生物学中的应用很广泛,但这些模型是否适合描述 3D 支架中的组织生长尚未得到探索。我们发现,多孔费希尔模型能够捕获与细胞密度和组织覆盖度有关的特征,但不能捕获与组织界面圆形度有关的几何特征。我们的分析确定了组织生长的两个不同阶段,提出了几个模型改进的领域,并为探索 3D 打印支架中的组织生长的未来实验工作提供了指导。