Meniscal tears have a poor healing capacity, and damage to the meniscus is associated with significant pain, disability, and progressive degenerative changes in the knee joint that lead to osteoarthritis. Therefore, strategies to promote meniscus repair and improve meniscus function are needed. The objective of this study was to generate porcine meniscus-derived matrix (MDM) scaffolds and test their effectiveness in promoting meniscus repair via migration of endogenous meniscus cells from the surrounding meniscus or exogenously seeded human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). Both endogenous meniscal cells and MSCs infiltrated the MDM scaffolds. In the absence of exogenous cells, the 8% MDM scaffolds promoted the integrative repair of an in vitro meniscal defect. Dehydrothermal crosslinking and concentration of the MDM influenced the biochemical content and shear strength of repair, demonstrating that the MDM can be tailored to promote tissue repair. These findings indicate that native meniscus cells can enhance meniscus healing if a scaffold is provided that promotes cellular infiltration and tissue growth. The high affinity of cells for the MDM and the ability to remodel the scaffold reveals the potential of MDM to integrate with native meniscal tissue to promote long-term repair without necessarily requiring exogenous cells.
With appropriate treatment parameters, photochemical bonding rapidly produced a stable structural interface between cartilage tissue samples and may be a promising strategy for enhancing initial attachment in cartilage repair strategies.
Aggrecan is an extracellular matrix molecule that contributes to the mechanical properties of articular cartilage and meniscal fibrocartilage, but the abundance and processing of aggrecan in these tissues are different. The objective of this study was to compare patterns of aggrecan processing by chondrocytes and meniscal fibrochondrocytes in tissue explants and cell-agarose constructs. The effects of transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF-beta1) stimulation on aggrecan deposition and processing were examined, and construct mechanical properties were measured. Fibrochondrocytes synthesized and retained less proteoglycans than did chondrocytes in tissue explants and agarose constructs. In chondrocyte constructs, TGF-beta1 induced the accumulation of a 120-kDa aggrecan species previously detected in mature bovine cartilage. Fibrochondrocyte-seeded constructs contained high-molecular-weight aggrecan but lacked aggrecanase-generated fragments found in native, immature meniscus. In addition, reflecting the lesser matrix accumulation, fibrochondrocyte constructs had significantly lower compression moduli than did chondrocyte constructs. These cell type-specific differences in aggrecan synthesis, retention, and processing may have implications for the development of functional engineered tissue grafts.
Objective To examine the relative susceptibility of cartilage and meniscus tissues to mechanical injury by applying a single, controlled overload and observing cellular, biochemical, and mechanical changes. Design Cartilage and meniscus tissue explants in radial confinement were subjected to a range of injury by indenting to 40% strain at three different strain rates: 0.5%/s (slow), 5%/s (medium), or 50%/s (fast). Following injury, samples were cultured for either 1 or 9 days. Explants were assayed for cell metabolic activity, water content, and sGAG content. Mechanical properties of explants were determined in torsional shear and unconfined compression. Conditioned medium was assayed for sGAG and LDH release. Results Peak injury force increased with strain rate but both tissues displayed little to no macroscopic damage. Cell metabolism was lowest in medium and fast groups on day 1. Cell lysis increased with peak injury force and loading rate in both tissues. In contrast, sGAG content and release did not significantly vary with loading rate. Additionally, mechanical properties did not significantly vary with loading rate in either tissue. Conclusion By use of a custom confinement chamber, large peak forces were obtained without macroscopic destruction of the explants. At the loads achieved in this studied, cell damage was induced without detectable physical or compositional changes. These results indicate that sub-failure injury can induce biologic damage that may not be readily detected and could be an early event in osteoarthritis genesis.
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