Abstract

ObjectiveCartilage tissue engineering strategies that use autologous chondrocytes require in vitro expansion of cells to obtain enough cells to produce functional engineered tissue. However, chondrocytes dedifferentiate during expansion culture, limiting their ability to produce chondrogenic tissue and their utility for cell-based cartilage repair strategies. The current study identified conditions that favor cartilage production and the mechanobiological mechanisms responsible for these benefits. DesignChondrocytes were isolated from juvenile bovine knee joints and cultured with (primed) or without (unprimed) a growth factor cocktail. Gene expression, cell morphology, cell adhesion, cytoskeletal protein distribution, and cell mechanics were assessed. Following passage 5, cells were embedded into agarose hydrogels to evaluate functional properties of engineered cartilage. ResultsPriming cells during expansion culture altered cell phenotype and chondrogenic tissue production. Unbiased RNA-sequencing analysis suggested, and experimental studies confirmed, that growth factor priming delays dedifferentiation associated changes in cell adhesion and cytoskeletal organization. Priming also overrode mechanobiological pathways to prevent chondrocytes from remodeling their cytoskeleton to accommodate the stiff, monolayer microenvironment. Passage 1 primed cells deformed less and had lower YAP1 activity than unprimed cells. Differences in cell adhesion, morphology, and cell mechanics between primed and unprimed cells were mitigated by passage 5. ConclusionsPriming suppresses mechanobiologic cytoskeletal remodeling to prevent chondrocyte dedifferentiation, resulting in more cartilage-like tissue-engineered constructs

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