间充质干细胞
软骨发生
髌下脂肪垫
组织工程
脚手架
软骨
胚胎干细胞
生物医学工程
干细胞
再生(生物学)
细胞生物学
解剖
化学
骨关节炎
生物
病理
医学
基因
替代医学
生物化学
作者
Shawn P. Grogan,Erik W. Dorthé,Nicholas E. Glembotski,Florian Gaul,Darryl D. D’Lima
标识
DOI:10.1080/03008207.2019.1617280
摘要
Purpose: Scaffold-free cartilage tissue engineering circumvents issues with scaffold seeding, potential toxicity response, and impaired host integration. However, precisely controlling and maintaining a scaffold-free construct shape have been challenging. We explored the feasibility of microneedle arrays to print tissue using cellular microspheroids as building blocks.Materials and Methods: Human embryonic-derived mesenchymal stem cells or infrapatellar fat pad mesenchymal stem cells were used to create microspheroids of 500 µm in diameter, which were assembled on microneedle arrays in a predefined arrangement using a robotic system under computer vision. Microspheroids on microneedles were cultured to permit fusion into a tissue construct. Infrapatellar fat pad mesenchymal stem cell constructs were either implanted into chondral defects created in human osteoarthritic cartilage explants or maintained on the microneedle array for 3 weeks. Embryonic-derived mesenchymal stem cell constructs were designed to be press-fit into 3 mm subchondral defects in New Zealand White rabbits and maintained for up to 8 weeks to assess retention, early tissue repair, and more mature cartilage regeneration.Results: Microspheroids of both cell types fused together in culture to form neotissues of predefined shape and size. Infrapatellar fat pad mesenchymal stem cell neotissues expressed high levels of chondrogenic genes and integrated with the surrounding osteoarthritic host cartilage. Embryonic-derived mesenchymal stem cell constructs generated chondrogenic neotissue in vivo as early as 2 weeks and more mature tissue by 8 weeks with increased glycosaminoglycan deposition.Conclusions: We constructed defined scaffold-free shapes by bioprinting and fusing microspheroids. Proof of concept was shown in the repair of ex vivo osteoarthritic human cartilage and in vivo rabbit osteochondral (OC) defects.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI