Detalle Publicación

ARTÍCULO

Ex vivo maturation of 3D-printed, chondrocyte-laden, polycaprolactone-based scaffolds prior to transplantation improves engineered cartilage substitute properties and integration

Autores: Chiesa-Estomba, C. M.; Hernaez-Moya, R.; Rodino, C.; Delgado, A.; Fernández-Blanco, G.; Aldazábal Mensa, Javier; Paredes Puente, Jacobo; Izeta, A. (Autor de correspondencia); Aiastui, A. (Autor de correspondencia)
Título de la revista: CARTILAGE
ISSN: 1947-6035
Volumen: 13
Número: 4
Páginas: 105 - 118
Fecha de publicación: 2022
Resumen:
Objective The surgical management of nasal septal defects due to perforations, malformations, congenital cartilage absence, traumatic defects, or tumors would benefit from availability of optimally matured septal cartilage substitutes. Here, we aimed to improve in vitro maturation of 3-dimensional (3D)-printed, cell-laden polycaprolactone (PCL)-based scaffolds and test their in vivo performance in a rabbit auricular cartilage model. Design Rabbit auricular chondrocytes were isolated, cultured, and seeded on 3D-printed PCL scaffolds. The scaffolds were cultured for 21 days in vitro under standard culture media and normoxia or in prochondrogenic and hypoxia conditions, respectively. Cell-laden scaffolds (as well as acellular controls) were implanted into perichondrium pockets of New Zealand white rabbit ears (N = 5 per group) and followed up for 12 weeks. At study end point, the tissue-engineered scaffolds were extracted and tested by histological, immunohistochemical, mechanical, and biochemical assays. Results Scaffolds previously matured in vitro under prochondrogenic hypoxic conditions showed superior mechanical properties as well as improved patterns of cartilage matrix deposition, chondrogenic gene expression (COL1A1, COL2A1, ACAN, SOX9, COL10A1), and proteoglycan production in vivo, compared with scaffolds cultured in standard conditions. Conclusions In vitro maturation of engineered cartilage scaffolds under prochondrogenic conditions that better mimic the in vivo environment may be beneficial to improve functional properties of the engineered grafts. The proposed maturation strategy may also be of use for other tissue-engineered constructs and may ultimately impact survival and integration of the grafts in the damaged tissue microenvironment.
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