Abstract

Chondrocyte maturation during cartilage development occurs under diverse and dynamic mechanical environments. Mechanical stimulation through bioreactor culture may mimic these conditions to direct cartilage tissue engineering in vitro. Mechanical cues can promote chondrocyte homeostasis or hypertrophy and mineralization, depending potentially on the timing of load application. Here, we tested the effects of chondrogenic priming duration on the response of engineered human cartilage constructs to dynamic mechanical compression. We cultured human bone marrow stromal cells (hMSCs) in fibrin hydrogels under chondrogenic priming conditions for periods of 0, 2, 4, or 6 weeks prior to two weeks of either static culture or dynamic compression. We measured construct mechanical properties, cartilage matrix composition, and gene expression. Dynamic compression increased the equilibrium and dynamic modulus of the engineered tissue, depending on the duration of chondrogenic priming. For priming times of 2 weeks or greater, dynamic compression enhanced COL2A1 and AGGRECAN mRNA expression at the end of the loading period, but did not alter total collagen or glycosaminoglycan matrix deposition. Load initiation at priming times of 4 weeks or less repressed transient osteogenic signaling (RUNX2, OPN) and expression of CYR61, a YAP/TAZ-TEAD-target gene. No suppression of osteogenic gene expression was observed if loading was initiated after 6 weeks of in vitro priming, when mechanical stimulation was observed to increase the expression of type X collagen. Taken together, these data demonstrate that the duration of in vitro chondrogenic priming regulates the cell response to dynamic mechanical compression and suggests that early loading may preserve chondrocyte homeostasis while delayed loading may support cartilage maturation.

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