Cartilage tissue engineering using pre-aggregated human articular chondrocytes

In this study, we first aimed at determining whether human articular chondrocytes (HAC) proliferate in aggregates in the presence of strong chondrocyte mitogens. We then investigated if the aggregated cells have an enhanced chondrogenic capacity as compared to cells cultured in monolayer. HAC from f...

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Main Authors: F Wolf, C Candrian, D Wendt, J Farhadi, M Heberer, I Martin, A Barbero
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AO Research Institute Davos 2008-12-01
Series:European Cells & Materials
Online Access:http://www.ecmjournal.org/journal/papers/vol016/pdf/v016a10.pdf
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spelling doaj-55eba6f67f524db78c65aadce9390cbb2020-11-24T23:06:08Zeng AO Research Institute DavosEuropean Cells & Materials1473-22622008-12-01169299Cartilage tissue engineering using pre-aggregated human articular chondrocytesF WolfC CandrianD WendtJ FarhadiM HebererI MartinA BarberoIn this study, we first aimed at determining whether human articular chondrocytes (HAC) proliferate in aggregates in the presence of strong chondrocyte mitogens. We then investigated if the aggregated cells have an enhanced chondrogenic capacity as compared to cells cultured in monolayer. HAC from four donors were cultured in tissue culture dishes either untreated or coated with 1% agarose in the presence of TGFb-1, FGF-2 and PDGF-BB. Proliferation and stage of differentiation were assessed by measuring respectively DNA contents and type II collagen mRNA. Expanded cells were induced to differentiate in pellets or in Hyaff®-11 meshes and the formed tissues were analysed biochemically for glycosaminoglycans (GAG) and DNA, and histologically by Safranin O staining. The amount of DNA in aggregate cultures increased significantly from day 2 to day 6 (by 3.2-fold), but did not further increase with additional culture time. Expression of type II collagen mRNA was about two orders of magnitude higher in aggregated HAC as compared to monolayer expanded cells. Pellets generated by aggregated HAC were generally more intensely stained for GAG than those generated by monolayer-expanded cells. Scaffolds seeded with aggregates accumulated more GAG (1.3-fold) than scaffolds seeded with monolayer expanded HAC. In conclusion, this study showed that HAC culture in aggregates does not support a relevant degree of expansion. However, aggregation of expanded HAC prior to loading into a porous scaffold enhances the quality of the resulting tissues and could thus be introduced as an intermediate culture phase in the manufacture of engineered cartilage grafts. http://www.ecmjournal.org/journal/papers/vol016/pdf/v016a10.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author F Wolf
C Candrian
D Wendt
J Farhadi
M Heberer
I Martin
A Barbero
spellingShingle F Wolf
C Candrian
D Wendt
J Farhadi
M Heberer
I Martin
A Barbero
Cartilage tissue engineering using pre-aggregated human articular chondrocytes
European Cells & Materials
author_facet F Wolf
C Candrian
D Wendt
J Farhadi
M Heberer
I Martin
A Barbero
author_sort F Wolf
title Cartilage tissue engineering using pre-aggregated human articular chondrocytes
title_short Cartilage tissue engineering using pre-aggregated human articular chondrocytes
title_full Cartilage tissue engineering using pre-aggregated human articular chondrocytes
title_fullStr Cartilage tissue engineering using pre-aggregated human articular chondrocytes
title_full_unstemmed Cartilage tissue engineering using pre-aggregated human articular chondrocytes
title_sort cartilage tissue engineering using pre-aggregated human articular chondrocytes
publisher AO Research Institute Davos
series European Cells & Materials
issn 1473-2262
publishDate 2008-12-01
description In this study, we first aimed at determining whether human articular chondrocytes (HAC) proliferate in aggregates in the presence of strong chondrocyte mitogens. We then investigated if the aggregated cells have an enhanced chondrogenic capacity as compared to cells cultured in monolayer. HAC from four donors were cultured in tissue culture dishes either untreated or coated with 1% agarose in the presence of TGFb-1, FGF-2 and PDGF-BB. Proliferation and stage of differentiation were assessed by measuring respectively DNA contents and type II collagen mRNA. Expanded cells were induced to differentiate in pellets or in Hyaff®-11 meshes and the formed tissues were analysed biochemically for glycosaminoglycans (GAG) and DNA, and histologically by Safranin O staining. The amount of DNA in aggregate cultures increased significantly from day 2 to day 6 (by 3.2-fold), but did not further increase with additional culture time. Expression of type II collagen mRNA was about two orders of magnitude higher in aggregated HAC as compared to monolayer expanded cells. Pellets generated by aggregated HAC were generally more intensely stained for GAG than those generated by monolayer-expanded cells. Scaffolds seeded with aggregates accumulated more GAG (1.3-fold) than scaffolds seeded with monolayer expanded HAC. In conclusion, this study showed that HAC culture in aggregates does not support a relevant degree of expansion. However, aggregation of expanded HAC prior to loading into a porous scaffold enhances the quality of the resulting tissues and could thus be introduced as an intermediate culture phase in the manufacture of engineered cartilage grafts.
url http://www.ecmjournal.org/journal/papers/vol016/pdf/v016a10.pdf
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