Abstract

In the field of tissue engineering, progress has been made towards the development of new treatments for cartilage and bone defects. However, in vitro culture conditions for human bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells (hBMSCs) have not yet been fully defined. To improve our understanding of cartilage and bone in vitro differentiation, we investigated the effect of culture conditions on hBMSC differentiation. We hypothesized that the use of two different culture media including specific growth factors, TGFβ1 or BMP2, as well as low (2% O2) or high (20% O2) oxygen tension, would improve the chondrogenic and osteogenic potential, respectively. Chondrogenic and osteogenic differentiation of hBMSCs isolated from multiple donors and expanded under the same conditions were directly compared. Chondrogenic groups showed a notable upregulation of chondrogenic markers compared with osteogenic groups. Greater sGAG production and deposition, and collagen type II and I accumulation occurred for chondrogenic groups. Chondrogenesis at 2% O2 significantly reduced ALP gene expression and reduced type I collagen deposition, producing a more stable and less hypertrophic chondrogenic phenotype. An O2 tension of 2% did not inhibit osteogenic differentiation at the protein level but reduced ALP and OC gene expression. An upregulation of ALP and OC occurred during osteogenesis in BMP2 containing media under 20% O2; BMP2 free osteogenic media downregulated ALP and also led to higher sGAG release. A higher mineralization was observed in the presence of BMP2 during osteogenesis. This study demonstrates how the modulation of O2 tension, combined with tissue-specific growth factors and media composition can be tailored in vitro to promote chondral or endochondral differentiation while using the same donor cell population.

Highlights

  • Due to donor variation, studying osteogenesis and chondrogenesis in parallel, with the same population of cells, can aid in the understanding of specific factors supplemented in the media and their interaction with oxygen tension

  • A panel of genes associated with chondrogenic differentiation (Collagen type II, Aggrecan, SOX9), hypertrophy (Collagen type X and alkaline phosphatase (ALP)), and osteogenic differentiation (RUNX2, Osteocalcin (OC)) were investigated on day 14 (Figure 2)

  • A panel of genes associated with chondrogenic differentiation (Collagen type II, Aggrecan, SOX9), hypertrophy (Collagen type X and alkaline phosphatase (ALP)), and osteogenic differentiation (RUNX2, Osteocalcin (OC)) were investigated on day 14 (Figure 2).7 of 19

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Cartilage and bone are unique and complex tissues, in physical proximity to each other but very different in structure, function, cell phenotype, microenvironment and mechanical stiffness. Bone and cartilage together form the osteochondral unit, which provides the structure and support necessary for load-bearing and movement. Damage to either of these tissues, caused by trauma or diseases such as osteoarthritis, reduces function, eventually leading to joint immobility and severe pain [1,2]. Size and location of the osteochondral lesion, invasive surgical treatments are often required [3,4], including osteochondral grafts and mosaicplasty [5,6]. Cell-based regenerative approaches such as autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI) [7]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call