Cartilage tissue engineering using differentiated and purified induced pluripotent stem cells |
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Authors: | Brian O. Diekman Nicolas Christoforou Vincent P. Willard Haosi Sun Johannah Sanchez-Adams Kam W. Leong Farshid Guilak |
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Affiliation: | aDepartment of Orthopaedic Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, 27710;;bDepartment of Biomedical Engineering, Duke University, Durham, NC, 27708; and;cBiomedical Engineering Department, Khalifa University of Science Technology and Research, P.O. Box 127788, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates |
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Abstract: | The development of regenerative therapies for cartilage injury has been greatly aided by recent advances in stem cell biology. Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) have the potential to provide an abundant cell source for tissue engineering, as well as generating patient-matched in vitro models to study genetic and environmental factors in cartilage repair and osteoarthritis. However, both cell therapy and modeling approaches require a purified and uniformly differentiated cell population to predictably recapitulate the physiological characteristics of cartilage. Here, iPSCs derived from adult mouse fibroblasts were chondrogenically differentiated and purified by type II collagen (Col2)-driven green fluorescent protein (GFP) expression. Col2 and aggrecan gene expression levels were significantly up-regulated in GFP+ cells compared with GFP− cells and decreased with monolayer expansion. An in vitro cartilage defect model was used to demonstrate integrative repair by GFP+ cells seeded in agarose, supporting their potential use in cartilage therapies. In chondrogenic pellet culture, cells synthesized cartilage-specific matrix as indicated by high levels of glycosaminoglycans and type II collagen and low levels of type I and type X collagen. The feasibility of cell expansion after initial differentiation was illustrated by homogenous matrix deposition in pellets from twice-passaged GFP+ cells. Finally, atomic force microscopy analysis showed increased microscale elastic moduli associated with collagen alignment at the periphery of pellets, mimicking zonal variation in native cartilage. This study demonstrates the potential use of iPSCs for cartilage defect repair and for creating tissue models of cartilage that can be matched to specific genetic backgrounds. |
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Keywords: | chondrocyte bone morphogenetic proteins transforming growth factor-beta cartilage micromechanics cartilage regeneration |
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