“…Mesenchymal progenitor cells derived from healthy articular cartilage, herein referred as CPCs, are a small subset of cells that are highly proliferative, chondrogenic, and migratory ( Dowthwaite et al, 2004 ; Seol et al, 2014 ; Jayasuriya and Chen, 2015 ; Jayasuriya et al, 2016 ), making them a potentially useful resource for biologic cell therapy and cartilaginous tissue engineering applications ( McCarthy et al, 2012 ; Seol et al, 2014 ; Bilgen et al, 2018 ; Park et al, 2020 ). Further, they are resistant to cellular hypertrophy and terminal differentiation ( McCarthy et al, 2012 ; Twomey-Kozak et al, 2020 ), unlike mesenchymal progenitor/stem cells from bone marrow and osteoarthritic (diseased) cartilage tissue ( Jayasuriya et al, 2018 ; Hu et al, 2019 ; Liu et al, 2020 ). We have recently demonstrated the efficacy of using stable CPC lines, either as such or in a collagen coated hydroxypropyl cellulose scaffold, to stimulate meniscus injury repair in rat and human ex-vivo organ culture model systems, respectively ( Jayasuriya et al, 2019 ; Newberry et al, 2020 ).…”