References of "Carlier, Aurélie"
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See detailTo heal or not to heal: modeling the influence of oxygen during fracture healing.
Carlier, Aurélie ULg; Geris, Liesbet ULg; Van Oosterwyck, Hans

Conference (2013, September 11)

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See detailModeling the influence of oxygen in delayed bone fracture healing.
Carlier, Aurélie ULg; Geris, Liesbet ULg; Van Oosterwyck, Hans

Conference (2013, August 25)

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See detailA multiscale model of the influence of oxygen during bone fracture healing.
Carlier, Aurélie ULg; Geris, Liesbet ULg; Van Oosterwyck, Hans

Poster (2013, April 03)

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See detailTo heal or not to heal: a multiscale model of the influence of oxygen during bone fracture healing.
Carlier, Aurélie ULg; Geris, Liesbet ULg; Van Oosterwyck, Hans

Poster (2012, October 24)

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See detailA multiscale model of sprouting angiogenesis during fracture healing.
Carlier, Aurélie ULg; Geris, Liesbet ULg; Van Oosterwyck, Hans

Conference (2012, September 18)

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See detailMultiscale modeling of in the influence of oxygen during bone fracture healing.
Carlier, Aurélie ULg; Van Gastel, Nick; Carmeliet, Geert et al

Poster (2012, September 17)

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See detailMultiscale modeling of sprouting angiogenesis: tip cells are selected for the top.
Carlier, Aurélie ULg; Geris, Liesbet ULg; Van Oosterwyck, Hans

Poster (2012, September 05)

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See detailMultiscale modelling of the influence of VEGF on sprouting angiogenesis.
Carlier, Aurélie ULg; Geris, Liesbet ULg; Van Oosterwyck, Hans

Poster (2012, July 06)

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See detailTip cells at the top: a multiscale model of sprouting angiogenesis.
Carlier, Aurélie ULg; Geris, Liesbet ULg; Van Oosterwyck, Hans

Conference (2012, July 01)

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See detailTip cells at the top: multiscale modeling of angiogenesis during fracture healing
Carlier, Aurélie ULg; Geris, Liesbet ULg; Van Oosterwyck, Hans

in Computer Methods in Biomechanics and Biomedical Engineering (CMBBE) - Proceedings (2012, April)

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See detailMOSAIC: a multiscale model of osteogenesis and sprouting angiogenesis with lateral inhibition of endothelial cells.
Carlier, Aurélie ULg; Geris, Liesbet ULg; Bentley, Katie et al

in PLoS Computational Biology (2012), 8(10), 1002724

The healing of a fracture depends largely on the development of a new blood vessel network (angiogenesis) in the callus. During angiogenesis tip cells lead the developing sprout in response to ... [more ▼]

The healing of a fracture depends largely on the development of a new blood vessel network (angiogenesis) in the callus. During angiogenesis tip cells lead the developing sprout in response to extracellular signals, amongst which vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is critical. In order to ensure a correct development of the vasculature, the balance between stalk and tip cell phenotypes must be tightly controlled, which is primarily achieved by the Dll4-Notch1 signaling pathway. This study presents a novel multiscale model of osteogenesis and sprouting angiogenesis, incorporating lateral inhibition of endothelial cells (further denoted MOSAIC model) through Dll4-Notch1 signaling, and applies it to fracture healing. The MOSAIC model correctly predicted the bone regeneration process and recapitulated many experimentally observed aspects of tip cell selection: the salt and pepper pattern seen for cell fates, an increased tip cell density due to the loss of Dll4 and an excessive number of tip cells in high VEGF environments. When VEGF concentration was even further increased, the MOSAIC model predicted the absence of a vascular network and fracture healing, thereby leading to a non-union, which is a direct consequence of the mutual inhibition of neighboring cells through Dll4-Notch1 signaling. This result was not retrieved for a more phenomenological model that only considers extracellular signals for tip cell migration, which illustrates the importance of implementing the actual signaling pathway rather than phenomenological rules. Finally, the MOSAIC model demonstrated the importance of a proper criterion for tip cell selection and the need for experimental data to further explore this. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that the MOSAIC model creates enhanced capabilities for investigating the influence of molecular mechanisms on angiogenesis and its relation to bone formation in a more mechanistic way and across different time and spatial scales. [less ▲]

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See detailCurrent views on calcium phosphate osteogenicity and the translation into effective bone regeneration strategies.
Chai, Y. C.; Carlier, Aurélie ULg; Bolander, J. et al

in Acta Biomaterialia (2012), 8(11), 3876-87

Calcium phosphate (CaP) has traditionally been used for the repair of bone defects because of its strong resemblance to the inorganic phase of bone matrix. Nowadays, a variety of natural or synthetic CaP ... [more ▼]

Calcium phosphate (CaP) has traditionally been used for the repair of bone defects because of its strong resemblance to the inorganic phase of bone matrix. Nowadays, a variety of natural or synthetic CaP-based biomaterials are produced and have been extensively used for dental and orthopaedic applications. This is justified by their biocompatibility, osteoconductivity and osteoinductivity (i.e. the intrinsic material property that initiates de novo bone formation), which are attributed to the chemical composition, surface topography, macro/microporosity and the dissolution kinetics. However, the exact molecular mechanism of action is unknown. This review paper first summarizes the most important aspects of bone biology in relation to CaP and the mechanisms of bone matrix mineralization. This is followed by the research findings on the effects of calcium (Ca(2)(+)) and phosphate (PO(4)(3)(-)) ions on the migration, proliferation and differentiation of osteoblasts during in vivo bone formation and in vitro culture conditions. Further, the rationale of using CaP for bone regeneration is explained, focusing thereby specifically on the material's osteoinductive properties. Examples of different material forms and production techniques are given, with the emphasis on the state-of-the art in fine-tuning the physicochemical properties of CaP-based biomaterials for improved bone induction and the use of CaP as a delivery system for bone morphogenetic proteins. The use of computational models to simulate the CaP-driven osteogenesis is introduced as part of a bone tissue engineering strategy in order to facilitate the understanding of cell-material interactions and to gain further insight into the design and optimization of CaP-based bone reparative units. Finally, limitations and possible solutions related to current experimental and computational techniques are discussed. [less ▲]

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See detailMultiscale modeling of sprouting angiogenesis
Carlier, Aurélie ULg; Geris, Liesbet ULg; Van Oosterwyck, Hans

Poster (2011, December 02)

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See detailCalcium phosphate scaffolds customizations for bone tissue engineering applications
Carlier, Aurélie ULg; Chai, Yoke Chin; Theys, Tina et al

Poster (2011, November 18)

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See detailAn integrative model based approach to optimize calcium phosphate scaffold-stem cell combinations
Carlier, Aurélie ULg; Chai, Yoke Chin; Theys, Tina et al

Poster (2011, June 07)

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See detailOptimization of calcium phosphate scaffold-cell combinations using an integrative model based approach
Carlier, Aurélie ULg; Chai, Yoke Chin; Theys, Tina et al

(2011, June 03)

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See detailDesigning optimal calcium phosphate scaffold-cell combinations using an integrative model-based approach.
Carlier, Aurélie ULg; Chai, Y.C.; Moesen, M. et al

in Acta Biomaterialia (2011), 7(10), 3573-85

Bone formation is a very complex physiological process, involving the participation of many different cell types and regulated by countless biochemical, physical and mechanical factors, including ... [more ▼]

Bone formation is a very complex physiological process, involving the participation of many different cell types and regulated by countless biochemical, physical and mechanical factors, including naturally occurring or synthetic biomaterials. For the latter, calcium phosphate (CaP)-based scaffolds have proven to stimulate bone formation, but at present still result in a wide range of in vivo outcomes, which is partly related to the suboptimal use and combination with osteogenic cells. To optimize CaP scaffold selection and make their use in combination with cells more clinically relevant, this study uses an integrative approach in which mathematical modeling is combined with experimental research. This paper describes the development and implementation of an experimentally informed bioregulatory model of the effect of calcium ions released from CaP-based biomaterials on the activity of osteogenic cells and mesenchymal stem cell driven ectopic bone formation. The amount of bone formation predicted by the mathematical model corresponds to the amount measured experimentally under similar conditions. Moreover, the model is also able to qualitatively predict the experimentally observed impaired bone formation under conditions such as insufficient cell seeding and scaffold decalcification. A strategy was designed in silico to overcome the negative influence of a low initial cell density on the bone formation process. Finally, the model was applied to design optimal combinations of calcium-based biomaterials and cell culture conditions with the aim of maximizing the amount of bone formation. This work illustrates the potential of mathematical models as research tools to design more efficient and cell-customized CaP scaffolds for bone tissue engineering applications. [less ▲]

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See detailComputational modelling of calcium mediated bone regeneration
Carlier, Aurélie ULg; Chai, Yoke Chin; Theys, Tina et al

Poster (2010, November 26)

Detailed reference viewed: 8 (1 ULg)
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See detailA mathematical model of calcium ion influence on the activity of osteogenic cells
Carlier, Aurélie ULg; Chai, Yoke Chin; Theys, Tina et al

Poster (2010, November 19)

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See detailA mathematical model of calcium ion influence on the activity of osteogenic cells
Carlier, Aurélie ULg; Chai, Yoke Chin; Theys, Tina et al

Poster (2010, November 19)

Detailed reference viewed: 8 (1 ULg)