This study compares bovine chondrocytes harvested from four different animal locations--nasoseptal, articular, costal, and auricular--for tissue-engineered cartilage modeling. While the work serves as a preliminary investigation for fabricating a human ear model, the results are important to tissue- engineered cartilage in general. Chondrocytes were cultured and examined to determine relative cell proliferation rates, type II collagen and aggrecan gene expression, and extracellular matrix production. Respective chondrocytes were then seeded onto biodegradable poly(L-lactide-epsilon-caprolactone) disc-shaped scaffolds. Cell-copolymer constructs were cultured and subsequently implanted in the subcutaneous space of athymic mice for up to 20 weeks. Neocartilage development in harvested constructs was assessed by molecular and histological means. Cell culture followed over periods of up to 4 weeks showed chondrocyte proliferation from the tissue sources varied, as did levels of type II collagen and aggrecan gene expression. For both genes, highest expression was found for costal chondrocytes, followed by nasoseptal, articular, and auricular cells. Retrieval of 20-week discs from mice revealed changes in construct dimensions with different chondrocytes. Greatest disc diameter was found for scaffolds seeded with auricular chondrocytes, followed by those with costal, nasoseptal, and articular cells. Greatest disc thickness was measured for scaffolds containing costal chondrocytes, followed by those with nasoseptal, auricular, and articular cells. Retrieved copolymer alone was smallest in diameter and thickness. Only auricular scaffolds developed elastic fibers after 20 weeks of implantation. Type II collagen and aggrecan were detected with differing expression levels on quantitative RT-PCR of discs implanted for 20 weeks. These data demonstrate that bovine chondrocytes obtained from different cartilaginous sites in an animal may elicit distinct responses during their respective development of a tissue-engineered neocartilage. Thus, each chondrocyte type establishes or maintains its particular developmental characteristics, and this observation is critical in the design and elaboration of any tissue-engineered cartilage model.
Among the vertebrate species, collagen is the most abundant protein and is associated with mineralization of their skeleton and dentition in all tissues except enamel. In such tissues, bones, calcifying tendon, dentin, and cementum are comprised principally of type I collagen, which has been proposed as a template for apatite mineral formation. Recent considerations of the interaction between type I collagen and calcium and phosphate ions as the major constituents of apatite have suggested that collagen polypeptide stereochemistry underlies binding of these ions at sites within collagen hole and overlap regions and leads to nucleation of crystals. The concept is fundamental to understanding both normal and abnormal mineralization, and it is reviewed in this article. Given this background, avenues for additional research studies in vertebrate mineralization will also be described. The latter include, for instance, how mineralization events subsequent to nucleation, that is, crystal growth and development, occur and whether they, too, are directed by collagen stereochemical parameters; whether mineralization can be expected in all spaces between collagen molecules; whether the side chains of charged amino acid residues actually point toward and into the hole and overlap collagen spaces to provide putative binding sites for calcium and phosphate ions; and what phenomena may be responsible for mineralization beyond hole and overlap zones and into extracellular tissue regions between collagen structural units. These questions will be discussed to provide a broader understanding of collagen contributions to potential mechanisms of vertebrate mineralization.
This study examines the tissue engineering of a human ear model through use of bovine chondrocytes isolated from four different cartilaginous sites (nasoseptal, articular, costal, and auricular) and seeded onto biodegradable poly(l-lactic acid) and poly(L-lactide-epsilon-caprolactone) (50 : 50) polymer ear-shaped scaffolds. After implantation in athymic mice for up to 40 weeks, cell/scaffold constructs were harvested and analyzed in terms of size, shape, histology, and gene expression. Gross morphology revealed that all the tissue-engineered cartilages retained the initial human auricular shape through 40 weeks of implantation. Scaffolds alone lost significant size and shape over the same period. Quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction demonstrated that the engineered chondrocyte/scaffolds yielded unique expression patterns for type II collagen, aggrecan, and bone sialoprotein mRNA. Histological analysis showed type II collagen and proteoglycan to be the predominant extracellular matrix components of the various constructs sampled at different implantation times. Elastin was also present but it was found only in constructs seeded with auricular chondrocytes. By 40 weeks of implantation, tissue-engineered cartilage of costal origin became calcified, marked by a notably high relative gene expression level of bone sialoprotein and the presence of rigid, nodular protrusions formed by mineralizing rudimentary cartilaginous growth plates. The collective data suggest that nasoseptal, articular, and auricular cartilages represent harvest sites suitable for development of tissue-engineered human ear models with retention over time of three-dimensional construct architecture, gene expression, and extracellular matrix composition comparable to normal, nonmineralizing cartilages. Calcification of constructs of costal chondrocyte origin clearly shows that chondrocytes from different tissue sources are not identical and retain distinct characteristics and that these specific cells are inappropriate for use in engineering a flexible ear model.
To determine the potential development in vivo of tissue-engineered auricular cartilage, chondrocytes from articular cartilage of bovine forelimb joints were seeded on poly(L-lactic acid-epsilon-caprolactone) copolymer scaffolds molded into the shape of a human ear. Copolymer scaffolds alone in the same shape were studied for comparison. Chondrocyte-seeded copolymer constructs and scaffolds alone were each implanted in dorsal skin flaps of athymic mice for up to 40 weeks. Retrieved specimens were examined by histological and molecular techniques. After 10 weeks of implantation, cell-seeded constructs developed cartilage as assessed by toluidine blue and safranin-O red staining; a vascular, perichondrium-like capsule enveloped these constructs; and tissue formation resembled the auricular shape molded originally. Cartilage matrix formation increased, the capsule persisted, and initial auricular configuration was maintained through implantation for 40 weeks. The presence of cartilage production was correlated with RT-PCR analysis, which showed expression of bovine-specific type II collagen and aggrecan mRNA in cell-seeded specimens at 20 and 40 weeks. Copolymer scaffolds monitored only for 40 weeks failed to develop cartilage or a defined capsule and expressed no mRNA. Extensive vascularization led to scaffold erosion, decrease in original size, and loss of contour and shape. These results demonstrate that poly(L-lactic acid-epsilon-caprolactone) copolymer seeded with articular chondrocytes supports development and maintenance of cartilage in a human ear shape over periods to 40 weeks in this implantation model.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.