Hyperplastic Human Macromass Cartilage for Joint Regeneration

Author:

Wen Ya123,Chen Yishan123,Wu Weiliang4,Zhang Hong123,Peng Zhi123,Yao Xudong15,Zhang Xianzhu16,Jiang Wei123,Liao Youguo123,Xie Yuan123,Shen Xilin123,Sun Heng17,Hu Jiajie123,Liu Hua123,Chen Xiao123,Chen Jiansong4,Ouyang Hongwei1238ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Dr. Li Dak Sum & Yip Yio Chin Center for Stem Cells and Regenerative Medicine and Department of Orthopedic Surgery of the Second Affiliated Hospital Zhejiang University School of Medicine Hangzhou 310058 China

2. Department of Sports Medicine Zhejiang University School of Medicine Hangzhou 310058 China

3. Zhejiang University‐University of Edinburgh Institute Zhejiang University School of Medicine and Key Laboratory of Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine of Zhejiang Province Zhejiang University School of Medicine Hangzhou 310058 China

4. Department of Orthopedic Surgery The Children's Hospital Zhejiang University School of Medicine National Clinical Research Center for Child Health Hangzhou 310052 China

5. The Fourth Affiliated Hospital International Institutes of Medicine Zhejiang University School of Medicine Yiwu 322000 China

6. Department of Orthopedics The First Affiliated Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine Hangzhou 310003 China

7. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery Orthopaedic Institute The First Affiliated Hospital Medical College Soochow University Suzhou 215006 China

8. China Orthopedic Regenerative Medicine Group (CORMed) Hangzhou 310058 China

Abstract

AbstractCartilage damage affects millions of people worldwide. Tissue engineering strategies hold the promise to provide off‐the‐shelf cartilage analogs for tissue transplantation in cartilage repair. However, current strategies hardly generate sufficient grafts, as tissues cannot maintain size growth and cartilaginous phenotypes simultaneously. Herein, a step‐wise strategy is developed for fabricating expandable human macromass cartilage (macro‐cartilage) in a 3D condition by employing human polydactyly chondrocytes and a screen‐defined serum‐free customized culture (CC). CC‐induced chondrocytes demonstrate improved cell plasticity, expressing chondrogenic biomarkers after a 14.59‐times expansion. Crucially, CC‐chondrocytes form large‐size cartilage tissues with average diameters of 3.25 ± 0.05 mm, exhibiting abundant homogenous matrix and intact structure without a necrotic core. Compared with typical culture, the cell yield in CC increases 2.57 times, and the expression of cartilage marker collagen type II increases 4.70 times. Transcriptomics reveal that this step‐wise culture drives a proliferation‐to‐differentiation process through an intermediate plastic stage, and CC‐chondrocytes undergo a chondral lineage‐specific differentiation with an activated metabolism. Animal studies show that CC macro‐cartilage maintains a hyaline‐like cartilage phenotype in vivo and significantly promotes the healing of large cartilage defects. Overall, an efficient expansion of human macro‐cartilage with superior regenerative plasticity is achieved, providing a promising strategy for joint regeneration.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),General Materials Science,General Chemical Engineering,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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