Application of bioluminescence resonance energy transfer-based cell tracking approach in bone tissue engineering.
Abstract
Bioluminescent imaging (BLI) has emerged as a popular in vivo tracking modality in
bone regeneration studies stemming from its clear advantages: non-invasive, real-time,
and inexpensive. We recently adopted bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET)
principle to improve BLI cell tracking and generated the brightest bioluminescent
signal known to date, which thus enables more sensitive real-time cell tracking at
deep tissue level. In the present study, we brought BRET-based cell tracking strategy
into the field of bone tissue engineering for the first time. We labeled rat mesenchymal
stem cells (rMSCs) with our in-house BRET-based GpNLuc reporter and evaluated the
cell tracking efficacy both in vitro and in vivo. In scaffold-free spheroid 3D culture
system, using BRET-based GpNLuc labeling resulted in significantly better correlation
to cell numbers than a fluorescence based approach. In scaffold-based 3D culture system,
GpNLuc-rMSCs displayed robust bioluminescence signals with minimal background noise.
Furthermore, a tight correlation between BLI signal and cell number highlighted the
robust reliability of using BRET-based BLI. In calvarial critical sized defect model,
robust signal and the consistency in cell survival evaluation collectively supported
BRET-based GpNLuc labeling as a reliable approach for non-invasively tracking MSC.
In summary, BRET-based GpNLuc labeling is a robust, reliable, and inexpensive real-time
cell tracking method, which offers a promising direction for the technological innovation
of BLI and even non-invasive tracking systems, in the field of bone tissue engineering.
Type
Journal articleSubject
Bioluminescent imagingbioluminescence resonance energy transfer
bone tissue engineering
cell tracking
mesenchymal stem cells
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23572Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1177/2041731421995465Publication Info
Wang, Lufei; Lee, Dong Joon; Han, Han; Zhao, Lixing; Tsukamoto, Hiroshi; Kim, Yong-Il;
... Ko, Ching-Chang (2021). Application of bioluminescence resonance energy transfer-based cell tracking approach
in bone tissue engineering. Journal of tissue engineering, 12. pp. 2041731421995465. 10.1177/2041731421995465. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23572.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Jen-Tsan Ashley Chi
Professor in Molecular Genetics and Mirobiology
We are using functional genomic approaches to investigate the nutrient signaling and
stress adaptations of cancer cells when exposed to various nutrient deprivations and
microenvironmental stress conditions. Recently, we focus on two areas. First, we are
elucidating the genetic determinants and disease relevance of ferroptosis, a newly
recognized form of cell death. Second, we have identified the mammalian stringent
response pathway which is highly similar to bacterial stringent response, but

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