Chitosan Scaffolds as Microcarriers for Dynamic Culture of Human Neural Stem Cells

Author:

Ando Yoshiki12ORCID,Chang Fei-Chien1,James Matthew1,Zhou Yang1ORCID,Zhang Miqin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA

2. Materials Department, Medical R&D Center, Corporate R&D Group, KYOCERA Corporation, Yasu 520-2362, Shiga, Japan

Abstract

Human neural stem cells (hNSCs) possess remarkable potential for regenerative medicine in the treatment of presently incurable diseases. However, a key challenge lies in producing sufficient quantities of hNSCs, which is necessary for effective treatment. Dynamic culture systems are recognized as a powerful approach to producing large quantities of hNSCs required, where microcarriers play a critical role in supporting cell expansion. Nevertheless, the currently available microcarriers have limitations, including a lack of appropriate surface chemistry to promote cell adhesion, inadequate mechanical properties to protect cells from dynamic forces, and poor suitability for mass production. Here, we present the development of three-dimensional (3D) chitosan scaffolds as microcarriers for hNSC expansion under defined conditions in bioreactors. We demonstrate that chitosan scaffolds with a concentration of 4 wt% (4CS scaffolds) exhibit desirable microstructural characteristics and mechanical properties suited for hNSC expansion. Furthermore, they could also withstand degradation in dynamic conditions. The 4CS scaffold condition yields optimal metabolic activity, cell adhesion, and protein expression, enabling sustained hNSC expansion for up to three weeks in a dynamic culture. Our study introduces an effective microcarrier approach for prolonged expansion of hNSCs, which has the potential for mass production in a three-dimensional setting.

Funder

KYOCERA Corporation

NIH

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Pharmaceutical Science

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