4.4 Article

Enhancing chondrogenic potential via mesenchymal stem cell sheet multilayering

Journal

REGENERATIVE THERAPY
Volume 18, Issue -, Pages 487-496

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.reth.2021.11.004

Keywords

Tissue engineering; Chondrogenic differentiation; Scaffold-free; Cellular interactions; Cell sheet technology

Funding

  1. University Technology Acceleration Grant (UTAG) from the Utah Science, Technology, and Research (USTAR) program

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The study investigated the effects of cell sheet multilayering technique on the fabrication of MSC-derived hyaline-like cartilage 3D layered constructs, demonstrating its potential to increase construct thickness and cellular interactions, while also identifying a thickness threshold that hinders chondrogenesis rate and extent.
Advanced tissue engineering approaches for direct articular cartilage replacement in vivo employ mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) sources, exploiting innate chondrogenic potential to fabricate hyaline-like constructs in vitro within three-dimensional (3D) culture conditions. Cell sheet technology represents one such advanced 3D scaffold-free cell culture platform, and previous work has shown that 3D MSC sheets are capable of in vitro hyaline-like chondrogenic differentiation. The present study aims to build upon this understanding and elucidate the effects of an established cell sheet manipulation technique, cell sheet multilayering, on fabrication of MSC-derived hyaline-like cartilage 3D layered constructs in vitro. To achieve this goal, multilayered MSC sheets are prepared and assessed for structural and biochemical transitions throughout chondrogenesis. Results support MSC multilayering as a means of increasing construct thickness and 3D cellular interactions related to in vitro chondrogenesis, including N-cadherin, connexin 43, and integrin beta-1. Data indicate that increasing construct thickness from 14 mu m (1-layer construct) to 25 mu m (2-layer construct) increases these cellular interactions and subsequent in vitro MSC chondrogenesis. However, a clear initial thickness threshold (33 mu m - 3-layer construct) is evident that decreases the rate and extent of in vitro chondrogenesis, specifically chondrogenic gene expressions (Sox9, aggrecan, type II collagen) and sulfated proteoglycan accumulation in deposited extracellular matrix (ECM). Together, these data support the utility of cell sheet multilayering as a platform for tailoring construct thickness and subsequent MSC chondrogenesis for future articular cartilage regeneration applications. (C) 2021, The Japanese Society for Regenerative Medicine. Production and hosting by Elsevier B.V.

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