Articular cartilage is the avascular and aneural tissue which is the primary connective tissue covering the surface of articulat- ing bone. Traumatic damage or degenerative diseases can cause articular cartilage injuries that are common in the population. As a result, the demand for new therapeutic options is continually increasing for older people and traumatic young patients. Many attempts have been made to address these clinical needs to treat articular cartilage injuries, including osteoarthritis (OA); however, regenerating highly qualified cartilage tissue remains a significant obstacle. 3D bioprinting technology combined with tissue engineering principles has been developed to create biological tissue constructs that recapitulate the anatomical, structural, and functional properties of native tissues. In addition, this cutting-edge technology can precisely place multiple cell types in a 3D tissue architecture. Thus, 3D bioprinting has rapidly become the most innovative tool for manufacturing clinically applicable bioengineered tissue constructs. This has led to increased interest in 3D bioprinting in articular cartilage tissue engineering applications. Here, we tissue engineering.
more »
« less
Hybrid Bioprinting of Zonally Stratified Human Articular Cartilage Using Scaffold‐Free Tissue Strands as Building Blocks
Abstract The heterogeneous and anisotropic articular cartilage is generally studied as a layered structure of “zones” with unique composition and architecture, which is difficult to recapitulate using current approaches. A novel hybrid bioprinting strategy is presented here to generate zonally stratified cartilage. Scaffold‐free tissue strands (TSs) are made of human adipose‐derived stem cells (ADSCs) or predifferentiated ADSCs. Cartilage TSs with predifferentiated ADSCs exhibit improved mechanical properties and upregulated expression of cartilage‐specific markers at both transcription and protein levels as compared to TSs with ADSCs being differentiated in the form of strands and TSs of nontransfected ADSCs. Using the novel hybrid approach integrating new aspiration‐assisted and extrusion‐based bioprinting techniques, the bioprinting of zonally stratified cartilage with vertically aligned TSs at the bottom zone and horizontally aligned TSs at the superficial zone is demonstrated, in which collagen fibers are aligned with designated orientation in each zone imitating the anatomical regions and matrix orientation of native articular cartilage. In addition, mechanical testing study reveals a compression modulus of ≈1.1 MPa, which is similar to that of human articular cartilage. The prominent findings highlight the potential of this novel bioprinting approach for building biologically, mechanically, and histologically relevant cartilage for tissue engineering purposes.
more »
« less
- Award ID(s):
- 1624515
- PAR ID:
- 10455900
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons)
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Advanced Healthcare Materials
- Volume:
- 9
- Issue:
- 22
- ISSN:
- 2192-2640
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
More Like this
-
-
Recreating articular cartilage tri-layered patterning for an engineered in vitro cell construct holds promise for advancing cartilage repair efforts. Our approach involves the development of a mul-tichambered perfusion tissue bioreactor that regulates fluid shear stress levels similar to the gradated hydrodynamic environment in articular cartilage. COMSOL modeling reveals our ta-pered cell chamber design will produce three different shear levels, high in the 22 – 41 mPa range, medium in the 4.5 – 8.4 mPa range, and low in the 2.2 – 3.8 mPa range and distributed across the surface of our mesenchymal stromal cell (MSC) encapsulated construct. In a 14-day bioreactor culture, we assess how fluid shear magnitude and cell vertical location within a 3D construct influence cell chondrogenesis. Notably, Sox9 expression for MSCs cultivated in our reactor shows spatially patterned gene upregulations coding for key chondrogenic marker pro-teins. Beginning with the high shear stress region, lubricin and type II collagen gene increases of 410 and 370-fold indicate cell movement towards a superficial zone architype which is further supported by histological and immunohistochemical stains illustrating the formation of a dense proteoglycan matrix enriched with lubricin, versican, and collagen types I and II molecules. For the medium shear stress region high aggrecan and type II collagen gene expressions of 2.3 and 400-fold, respectively, along with high proteoglycan analyses show movement toward a superfi-cial/mid-zone cartilage architype. For low shear stress regions higher collagen types II and X gene upregulations of 550 and 8,300-fold, the latter being 2x of that for the high shear regime, indicate cell movement with deep zone characteristics. Collectively, biochemical analysis, histol-ogy, and gene expression data demonstrated that our fluid shear bioreactor induced a stratified structure within tissue engineered constructs, demonstrating the feasibility of using this ap-proach to recapitulate the structure of native articular cartilage.more » « less
-
Abstract Articular cartilage (AC) is a load-bearing tissue that covers long bones in synovial joints. The biphasic/poroelastic mechanical properties of AC help it to protect joints by distributing loads, absorbing impact forces, and reducing friction. Unfortunately, alterations in these mechanical properties adversely impact cartilage function and precede joint degeneration in the form of osteoarthritis (OA). Thus, understanding what factors regulate the poroelastic mechanical properties of cartilage is of great scientific and clinical interest. Transgenic mouse models provide a valuable platform to delineate how specific genes contribute to cartilage mechanical properties. However, the poroelastic mechanical properties of murine articular cartilage are challenging to measure due to its small size (thickness ∼ 50 microns). In the current study, our objective was to test whether the poroelastic mechanical properties of murine articular cartilage can be determined based solely on time-dependent cell death measurements under constant loading conditions. We hypothesized that in murine articular cartilage subjected to constant, sub-impact loading from an incongruent surface, cell death area and tissue strain are closely correlated. We further hypothesized that the relationship between cell death area and tissue strain can be used—in combination with inverse finite element modeling—to compute poroelastic mechanical properties. To test these hypotheses, murine cartilage-on-bone explants from different anatomical locations were subjected to constant loading conditions by an incongruent surface in a custom device. Cell death area increased over time and scaled linearly with strain, which rose in magnitude over time due to poroelastic creep. Thus, we were able to infer tissue strain from cell death area measurements. Moreover, using tissue strain values inferred from cell death area measurements, we applied an inverse finite element modeling procedure to compute poroelastic material properties and acquired data consistent with previous studies. Collectively, our findings demonstrate in the key role poroelastic creep plays in mediating cell survival in mechanically loaded cartilage and verify that cell death area can be used as a surrogate measure of tissue strain that enables determination of murine cartilage mechanical properties.more » « less
-
Articular cartilage is a collagen-rich tissue that provides a smooth, lubricated surface for joints and is also responsible for load bearing during movements. The major components of cartilage are water, collagen, and proteoglycans. Osteoarthritis is a degenerative disease of articular cartilage, in which an early-stage indicator is the loss of proteoglycans from the collagen matrix. In this study, confocal Raman microspectroscopy was applied to study the degradation of articular cartilage, specifically focused on spatially mapping the loss of glycosaminoglycans (GAGs). Trypsin digestion was used as a model for cartilage degradation. Two different scanning geometries for confocal Raman mapping, cross-sectional and depth scans, were applied. The chondroitin sulfate coefficient maps derived from Raman spectra provide spatial distributions similar to histological staining for glycosaminoglycans. The depth scans, during which subsurface data were collected without sectioning the samples, can also generate spectra and GAG distributions consistent with Raman scans of the surface-to-bone cross sections. In native tissue, both scanning geometries demonstrated higher GAG content at the deeper zone beneath the articular surface and negligible GAG content after trypsin degradation. On partially digested samples, both scanning geometries detected an ∼100 μm layer of GAG depletion. Overall, this research provides a technique with high spatial resolution (25 μm pixel size) to measure cartilage degradation without tissue sections using confocal Raman microspectroscopy, laying a foundation for potential in vivo measurements and osteoarthritis diagnosis.more » « less
-
Abstract Post‐traumatic osteoarthritis develops following an inciting injury to a joint and results in cartilage degeneration. Mechanical loading, including articulation, drives anabolic responses in cartilage clinically, in vivo, and in vitro. Tribological articulation, or sliding of cartilage on a glass counterface, has long been used as an in vitro tool to study cartilage tissue behavior. However, it is unclear if tribological articulation affects chondrocyte fate following injury, and if the timing of articulation impacts the resultant effect. The goal of this study was to investigate the effect of tribological articulation on injured cartilage tissue at two time points: (i) performed immediately after injury and (ii) 24 h after injury. Neonatal bovine femoral cartilage explants were injured using a rapid spring‐loaded impactor and subsequently subjected to tribological articulation. Cell death due to impact injury was highest near the articular surface, suggesting a strain‐dependent mechanism. Immediate articulation following injury mitigated cell death compared to injury alone or delayed articulation; markers for both general cell death and early‐stage apoptosis were markedly decreased in the explants that were immediately slid. Interestingly, mitigation of cell death due to sliding was most predominant at the cartilage surface. Tribological articulation is known to create fluid flow within the tissue, predominantly at the articular surface, which could drive the protective response seen here. Altogether, this work shows that perturbations to the cellular environment immediately following cartilage injury significantly impact chondrocyte fate.more » « less
An official website of the United States government
