Abstract Osteoarthritis is a degenerative joint disease that limits mobility of the affected joint due to the degradation of articular cartilage and subchondral bone. The limited regenerative capacity of cartilage presents significant challenges when attempting to repair or reverse the effects of cartilage degradation. Tissue engineered medical products are a promising alternative to treat osteochondral degeneration due to their potential to integrate into the patient's existing tissue. The goal of this study was to create a scaffold that would induce site‐specific osteogenic and chondrogenic differentiation of human adipose‐derived stem cells (hASC) to generate a full osteochondral implant. Scaffolds were fabricated using 3D‐bioplotting of biodegradable polycraprolactone (PCL) with either β‐tricalcium phosphate (TCP) or decellularized bovine cartilage extracellular matrix (dECM) to drive site‐specific hASC osteogenesis and chondrogenesis, respectively. PCL‐dECM scaffolds demonstrated elevated matrix deposition and organization in scaffolds seeded with hASC as well as a reduction in collagen I gene expression. 3D‐bioplotted PCL scaffolds with 20% TCP demonstrated elevated calcium deposition, endogenous alkaline phosphatase activity, and osteopontin gene expression. Osteochondral scaffolds comprised of hASC‐seeded 3D‐bioplotted PCL‐TCP, electrospun PCL, and 3D‐bioplotted PCL‐dECM phases were evaluated and demonstrated site‐specific osteochondral tissue characteristics. This technique holds great promise as cartilage morbidity is minimized since autologous cartilage harvest is not required, tissue rejection is minimized via use of an abundant and accessible source of autologous stem cells, and biofabrication techniques allow for a precise, customizable methodology to rapidly produce the scaffold.
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3D in-situ characterization reveals the instability-induced auxetic behavior of collagen scaffolds for tissue engineering
Collagen scaffolds seeded with human chondrocytes have shown great potential for cartilage repair and regeneration. However, these porous scaffolds buckle under low compressive forces, creating regions of highly localized deformations that can cause cell death and deteriorate the integrity of the engineered tissue. We perform three-dimensional (3D) tomography-based characterization to track the evolution of collagen scaffolds’ microstructure under large deformation. The results illustrate how instabilities produce a spatially varying compaction across the specimens, with more pronounced collapse near the free boundaries. We discover that, independent of differences in pore-size distributions, all collagen scaffolds examined displayed strong auxetic behavior i.e., their transverse area contracts under compression, as a result of the instability cascade. This feature, typically characteristic of engineered metamaterials, is of critical importance for the performance of collagen scaffolds in tissue engineering, especially regarding the persistent challenge of lateral integration in cartilage constructs.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2129776
- PAR ID:
- 10563300
- Publisher / Repository:
- bioRxiv
- Date Published:
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Institution:
- bioRxiv
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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