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Effects of Graphene Oxide Nanofilm and Chicken Embryo Muscle Extract on Muscle Progenitor Cell Differentiation and Contraction

Finding an effective muscle regeneration technique is a priority for regenerative medicine. It is known that the key factors determining tissue formation include cells, capable of proliferating and/or differentiating, a niche (surface) allowing their colonization and growth factors. The interaction...

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Autores principales: Bałaban, Jaśmina, Wierzbicki, Mateusz, Zielińska, Marlena, Szczepaniak, Jarosław, Sosnowska, Malwina, Daniluk, Karolina, Cysewski, Dominik, Koczoń, Piotr, Chwalibog, André, Sawosz, Ewa
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7221809/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32340398
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25081991
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author Bałaban, Jaśmina
Wierzbicki, Mateusz
Zielińska, Marlena
Szczepaniak, Jarosław
Sosnowska, Malwina
Daniluk, Karolina
Cysewski, Dominik
Koczoń, Piotr
Chwalibog, André
Sawosz, Ewa
author_facet Bałaban, Jaśmina
Wierzbicki, Mateusz
Zielińska, Marlena
Szczepaniak, Jarosław
Sosnowska, Malwina
Daniluk, Karolina
Cysewski, Dominik
Koczoń, Piotr
Chwalibog, André
Sawosz, Ewa
author_sort Bałaban, Jaśmina
collection PubMed
description Finding an effective muscle regeneration technique is a priority for regenerative medicine. It is known that the key factors determining tissue formation include cells, capable of proliferating and/or differentiating, a niche (surface) allowing their colonization and growth factors. The interaction between these factors, especially between the surface of the artificial niche and growth factors, is not entirely clear. Moreover, it seems that the use of a complex of complementary growth factors instead of a few strictly defined ones could increase the effectiveness of tissue maturation, including muscle tissue. In this study, we evaluated whether graphene oxide (GO) nanofilm, chicken embryo muscle extract (CEME), and GO combined with CEME would affect the differentiation and functional maturation of muscle precursor cells, as well as the ability to spontaneously contract a pseudo-tissue muscle. CEME was extracted on day 18 of embryogenesis. Muscle cells obtained from an 8-day-old chicken embryo limb bud were treated with GO and CEME. Cell morphology and differentiation were observed using different microscopy methods. Cytotoxicity and viability of cells were measured by lactate dehydrogenase and Vybrant Cell Proliferation assays. Gene expression of myogenic regulatory genes was measured by Real-Time PCR. Our results demonstrate that CEME, independent of the culture surface, was the main factor influencing the intense differentiation of muscle progenitor cells. The present results, for the first time, clearly demonstrated that the cultured tissue-like structure was capable of inducing contractions without externally applied impulses. It has been indicated that a small amount of CEME in media (about 1%) allows the culture of pseudo-tissue muscle capable of spontaneous contraction. The study showed that the graphene oxide may be used as a niche for differentiating muscle cells, but the decisive influence on the maturation of muscle tissue, especially muscle contractions, depends on the complexity of the applied growth factors.
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spelling pubmed-72218092020-05-21 Effects of Graphene Oxide Nanofilm and Chicken Embryo Muscle Extract on Muscle Progenitor Cell Differentiation and Contraction Bałaban, Jaśmina Wierzbicki, Mateusz Zielińska, Marlena Szczepaniak, Jarosław Sosnowska, Malwina Daniluk, Karolina Cysewski, Dominik Koczoń, Piotr Chwalibog, André Sawosz, Ewa Molecules Article Finding an effective muscle regeneration technique is a priority for regenerative medicine. It is known that the key factors determining tissue formation include cells, capable of proliferating and/or differentiating, a niche (surface) allowing their colonization and growth factors. The interaction between these factors, especially between the surface of the artificial niche and growth factors, is not entirely clear. Moreover, it seems that the use of a complex of complementary growth factors instead of a few strictly defined ones could increase the effectiveness of tissue maturation, including muscle tissue. In this study, we evaluated whether graphene oxide (GO) nanofilm, chicken embryo muscle extract (CEME), and GO combined with CEME would affect the differentiation and functional maturation of muscle precursor cells, as well as the ability to spontaneously contract a pseudo-tissue muscle. CEME was extracted on day 18 of embryogenesis. Muscle cells obtained from an 8-day-old chicken embryo limb bud were treated with GO and CEME. Cell morphology and differentiation were observed using different microscopy methods. Cytotoxicity and viability of cells were measured by lactate dehydrogenase and Vybrant Cell Proliferation assays. Gene expression of myogenic regulatory genes was measured by Real-Time PCR. Our results demonstrate that CEME, independent of the culture surface, was the main factor influencing the intense differentiation of muscle progenitor cells. The present results, for the first time, clearly demonstrated that the cultured tissue-like structure was capable of inducing contractions without externally applied impulses. It has been indicated that a small amount of CEME in media (about 1%) allows the culture of pseudo-tissue muscle capable of spontaneous contraction. The study showed that the graphene oxide may be used as a niche for differentiating muscle cells, but the decisive influence on the maturation of muscle tissue, especially muscle contractions, depends on the complexity of the applied growth factors. MDPI 2020-04-23 /pmc/articles/PMC7221809/ /pubmed/32340398 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25081991 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Bałaban, Jaśmina
Wierzbicki, Mateusz
Zielińska, Marlena
Szczepaniak, Jarosław
Sosnowska, Malwina
Daniluk, Karolina
Cysewski, Dominik
Koczoń, Piotr
Chwalibog, André
Sawosz, Ewa
Effects of Graphene Oxide Nanofilm and Chicken Embryo Muscle Extract on Muscle Progenitor Cell Differentiation and Contraction
title Effects of Graphene Oxide Nanofilm and Chicken Embryo Muscle Extract on Muscle Progenitor Cell Differentiation and Contraction
title_full Effects of Graphene Oxide Nanofilm and Chicken Embryo Muscle Extract on Muscle Progenitor Cell Differentiation and Contraction
title_fullStr Effects of Graphene Oxide Nanofilm and Chicken Embryo Muscle Extract on Muscle Progenitor Cell Differentiation and Contraction
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Graphene Oxide Nanofilm and Chicken Embryo Muscle Extract on Muscle Progenitor Cell Differentiation and Contraction
title_short Effects of Graphene Oxide Nanofilm and Chicken Embryo Muscle Extract on Muscle Progenitor Cell Differentiation and Contraction
title_sort effects of graphene oxide nanofilm and chicken embryo muscle extract on muscle progenitor cell differentiation and contraction
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7221809/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32340398
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25081991
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