Chitosan has been shown to be a promising scaffold for various applications in tissue engineering. In this study, a chitosan-gelatin complex was fabricated as a scaffold by a freezing and lyophilizing technique. Chitosan's structure and characteristics are similar to those of glycosaminoglycan (GAG) and its analogs, and possesses various biological activities, whereas gelatin can serve as a substrate for cell adhesion, differentiation, and proliferation. With the use of autologous chondrocytes isolated from pig's auricular cartilage and seeded onto the chitosan-gelatin scaffold, elastic cartilages have been successfully engineered at the porcine abdomen subcutaneous tissue. After 16 weeks of implantation, the engineered elastic cartilages have acquired not only normal histological and biochemical, but also mechanical properties. The tissue sections of the engineered elastic cartilages showed that the chondrocytes were enclosed in the lacuna, similar to that of native cartilage. The presence of elastic fibers in the engineered cartilages was also demonstrated by Vehoeff's staining, and immunohistochemical staining confirmed the presence of type II collagen in the engineered cartilages. Quantitatively, the GAG in the engineered cartilages reached 90% of the concentration in native auricular cartilage. Furthermore, biomechanical analysis demonstrated that the extrinsic stiffness of the engineered cartilages reached 85% of the level in native auricular cartilage when it was harvested at 16 weeks. Thus, this study demonstrated that the chitosan-gelatin complex may serve as a suitable scaffold for cartilage tissue engineering.
Background
Bone marrow-derived stem cells (BMSCs) and chondrocytes have been reported to present “dedifferentiation” and “phenotypic loss” during the chondrogenic differentiation process in cartilage tissue engineering, and cartilage progenitor cells (CPCs) are novel seeding cells for cartilage tissue engineering. In our previous study, cartilage progenitor cells from different subtypes of cartilage tissue were isolated and identified in vitro, but the study on in vivo chondrogenic characteristics of cartilage progenitor cells remained rarely. In the current study, we explored the feasibility of combining cartilage progenitor cells with poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyvalerate) (PHBV) to produce tissue-engineered cartilage and compared the proliferation ability and chondrogenic characteristics of cartilage progenitor cells with those of bone marrow-derived stem cells and chondrocytes.
Methods
These three cells combined with PHBV were cultured in vitro for 1 week without chondrogenic induction and then transplanted subcutaneously into nude mice for 6 weeks. The cell-PHBV constructs were evaluated by gross observation, histological staining, glycosaminoglycan content measurement, biomechanical analysis and RT-PCR.
Results
The chondrocyte-PHBV constructs and CPC-PHBV constructs became an ivory-whitish cartilage-like tissue, while the BMSC-PHBV constructs became vascularized 6 weeks after the subcutaneous implantation. Histological examination showed that many typical cartilage structures were present in the chondrocyte group, some typical cartilage structures were observed in the CPC group, while no typical cartilage structures were observed in the BMSC group.
Conclusions
Cartilage progenitor cells may undergo chondrogenesis without chondrogenic induction and are better at chondrogenesis than BMSCs but worse than chondrocytes in the application of cartilage tissue engineering.
In the current study, we proved that MSC-EVs can effectively prevent UVB-induced cell damage via the reduction of intracellular ROS. We believe that this study can provide a new strategy for the prevention of skin photoaging.
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