Friday, June 22, 2012

Speeding Up Bone Growth by Manipulating Stem Cells

Source: University of South Carolina
Date: June 22, 2012

Summary:

A researcher at the University of South Carolina, has made significant progress toward reducing the time for broken bone to heal. A study published in Molecular Pharmaceutics found that surfaces coated with bionanoparticles could greatly accelerate the early phases of bone growth. Their coatings, based in part on genetically modified Tobacco mosaic virus, reduced the amount of time it took to convert stem cells into bone nodules -- from two weeks to just two days.

The conversion of these cells -- called stem cells -- is set into motion by external cues. In bone healing, the body senses the break at the cellular level and begins converting stem cells into new bone cells at the location of the break, bonding the fracture back into a single unit. The process is very slow, which is helpful in allowing a fracture to be properly set, but after that point the wait is at least an inconvenience, and in some cases highly detrimental. The researchers found that the coatings alone could reduce the amount of time to grow bone nodules from stem cells. Since then, theyhave refined their approach to better define just what it is that accelerates bone growth.