Adipose tissue derived stem cells (ASCs) based therapies for the repair and regeneration of various tissues have been widely investigated recently because of their multilineage potential and self-renewal capability. Our previous study demonstrated that autologous ASCs loaded onto natural coral scaffolds could repair cranial critical-sized defects (CSDs) in a canine model. The objective of this study was to determine whether the use of allogeneic ASCs could heal the same defect without the use of immunosuppressive therapy. The pedigree mismatch, mixed lymphocyte reaction assays (MLRs) and allogeneic skin graft experiments were performed to confirm unrelated ASC donors and recipients. A total of 12 adult Beagle dogs were enrolled in this study and divided into two groups. Bilateral cranial CSDs were created in each animal. The right-side defect was treated with allogeneic ASCs delivered onto a coral scaffold, and the left defect was either filled with an autologous ASC/coral composite (Group 1, n = 5) or with one coral scaffold alone (Group 2, n = 5). The systematic immune response and bone healing were evaluated postoperatively. The results showed that allogeneic ASC transplantation did not induce a systemic immune response by the hosts, and allogeneic ASCs could repair the cranial CSDs in an analogous way to that of the autologous cells. Moreover, both the green fluorescently labeled allogeneic and autologous ASCs were detected within the lacunae of newly formed bone in the defect site at 24 weeks, illustrating that the grafted ASCs contributed directly to bone regeneration in vivo. Thus, we concluded that allogeneic ASCs have the capacity to regenerate bone within craniofacial defects, providing an alternative source of seed cells for bone tissue engineering.
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