Authors
Jennifer Simkin, Mimi Sammarco, Danielle Fassler, Alex Cammack, Ken Muneoka
Publication date
2013/4
Source
The FASEB Journal
Volume
27
Pages
lb34-lb34
Publisher
The Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology
Description
One in 200 people in the U.S. is a survivor of a limb amputation. The ideal replacement for an amputated limb would be the regrowth of the patient's own limb. Mammals have the prominent ability to regenerate the digit tip (P3) including bone, surrounding connective tissue and epithelia. Bone fracture studies show that fluctuations in oxygen tension can trigger bone repair cascades such as osteoblast differentiation and osteoclast activation. Therefore, we hypothesize that changes in oxygen tension will facilitate the regenerative process of the digit tip. Because the ability to both control and measure oxygen tension in vivo presents an impediment to studying the influence of oxygen on a cellular level, the objective of this study was first to develop a reliable explant culture model that would simulate P3 regenerative bone formation, and second to evaluate the influence of oxygen on bone regeneration with this model …