Scots scientists grow bone in lab to treat land mine victims

Bone grown in a lab could soon be used to treat the victims of land mines following a scientific breakthrough by British scientists.
The new technique could be used to treat victims of land mines. Picture: APThe new technique could be used to treat victims of land mines. Picture: AP
The new technique could be used to treat victims of land mines. Picture: AP

Technology originally developed to detect gravitational waves in space has being utilised to make tissue engineered bone that can be used in grafts.

The latest development in a technique known as ‘nanokicking’ has allowed Scottish and Irish scientists to grow three-dimensional samples of mineralised bone in the lab for the first time.

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Bone is the second most grafted tissue after blood and is used in reconstructive, maxillofacial and orthopaedic surgeries.

But, currently, surgeons can only harvest limited amounts of living bone from the patient for use in graft, and bone from other donors is likely to be rejected by the body.

Instead, surgeons must rely on inferior donor sources which contain no cells capable of regenerating bone, limiting the size of repairs they can effect.

In a paper published in the journal Nature Biomedical Engineering, the researchers describe how they have used measurement technology, based on the sophisticated laser interferometer systems built for gravitational wave detection of astrophysical objects, to turn mesenchymal cells taken from human donors into bone cells in three dimensions.

The 3D living bone grafts, when implanted into patients in the future, will be able to repair or replace damaged sections of bone.

Mesenchymal stem cells, which are naturally produced by the human body in bone marrow, have the potential to differentiate into a range of specialised cell types such as bone, cartilage, ligament, tendon and muscle.

Nanokicking subjects cells to ultra-precise, nanoscale vibrations while they are suspended inside collagen gels.

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The process of nanokicking turns the cells in the gels into a ‘bone putty’ that has potential to be used to heal bone fractures and fill bone where there is a gap.

Using patients’ own mesenchymal cells means surgeons will be able to prevent the problem of rejection, and can bridge larger gaps in bone.

Study co-lead author Professor Matthew Dalby, of Glasgow University, said: “This is an exciting step forward for nanokicking, and it takes us one step further towards making the technique available for use in medical therapies.

“We are especially excited by these developments as much of the work we’re doing now is funded by Sir Bobby Charlton’s landmine charity Find a Better Way, which help individuals and communities heal from the devastating impact of landmines and other explosive remnants of war.

“Now that we have advanced the process to the point where it’s readily reproducible and affordable, we will begin our first human trials around three years from now in the NHS along with the Scottish National Blood Transfusion Service and reconstructive and orthopaedic surgeons in Glasgow.”

Lou McGrath, Find A Better Way’s chief executive, said: “Producing synthetic, off-the-shelf bone tissue will potentially transform the lives of untold numbers of civilian landmine blast survivors around the world.

“Find A Better Way is delighted to be funding this project - it is a perfect match for Sir Bobby’s dream of devising new solutions for one of the world’s most intractable set of problems.”

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The Find A Better Way project is led by Professor Manuel Salmeron-Sanchez who recently visited Cambodia to meet local people who have suffered landmine-related injuries.

He said: “For many people who have lost legs in landmine accidents, the difference between being confined to a wheelchair and being able to use a prosthesis could be only a few centimetres of bone”.

Professor Dalby added: “We have already proven the effectiveness of our scaffolds in veterinary medicine, by helping to grow new bone to save the leg of a dog who would otherwise have had to have it amputated.

“Combining bone putty and mechanically strong scaffolds will allow us to address large bone deficits in humans in the future.”

Some of the technology which underpins the nanokicking technique was originally developed by astrophysicists working on the search for gravitational waves, ripples in spacetime caused by massive events such as the collision of black holes.

Professor Stuart Reid, of Strathclyde University, said: “Having spent 15 years working in astrophysics and gravitational wave detection with the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO), it is amazing to see technology arising that could revolutionise key aspects of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine.

“The team is hard at work to get the technology ready for the first human trials, and to get devices into other labs around the UK and further afield.”

The nanokick bioreactors developed by the researchers are currently being further tested in several British labs.

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Since mesenchymal cells have the potential to differentiate into numerous other types of cell in addition to bone, the researchers expect that other clinically relevant applications of nanokicking will be discovered.

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