The reconstruction of large skeletal defects is still a tricky challenge in orthopedics. The newly formed bone tissue migrates sluggishly from the periphery to the center of the scaffold due to the restrictions of exchange of oxygen and nutrition impotent cells osteogenic differentiation. Angiogenesis plays an important role in bone reconstruction and more and more studies on angiogenesis in bone tissue engineering had been published. Promising advances of angiogenesis in bone tissue engineering by scaffold designs, angiogenic factor delivery, in vivo prevascularization and in vitro prevascularization are discussed in detail. Among all the angiogenesis mode, angiogenic factor delivery is the common methods of angiogenesis in bone tissue engineering and possible research directions in the future.
Recent studies have suggested that neuronal apoptosis in cerebral ischemia could arise from dysfunction of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and mitochondria. B-cell lymphoma/leukemia-2 gene (Bcl-2) has been described as an inhibitor both in programmed cell death (PCD) and ER dysfunction during apoptosis, and the Bcl-2 family play a key role in regulating the PCD, both locally at the ER and from a distance at the mitochondrial membrane. However, its signal pathways and concrete mechanisms in endoplasmic reticulum-initiated apoptosis remain incompletely understood. We therefore investigate whether ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) causes neuronal apoptosis in part via cross-talk between ER and mitochondria or not, and how the overexpression of Bcl-2 prevents this form of cell death. Here we show that analogous I/R-induced cell death occurs consequent to interactions of ER stress and mitochondrial death pathways. The participation of the mitochondrial pathway was demonstrated by the release of cytochrome C (cyt C) from mitochondrial into cytoplasmic fractions and caspase-9 cleavage. The involvement of ER stress was further supported by the observable increase of glucose-regulated protein 78(GRP78)/BiP expression and caspase-12 activity. Furthermore, prior to these changes, swelling of the ER lumen and dissociation of ribosomes from rough ER were detected by electron microscopy. Bcl-2 overexpression inhibits the release of cyt C and the activation of caspase-9/-8/-3 but not caspase-12 based on the results of Western blot. These suggest that cross-talk between ER and mitochondria participate in neuronal damage after ischemia/reperfusion. Bcl-2 overexpression could suppress I/R-induced neuronal apoptosis via influencing mitochondrial integrity. 相似文献