Abstract

Mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs) represent a promising cell type for treating damaged synovial joints. The therapeutic potential of MSCs will be facilitated by the engineering of biomaterial environments capable of directing their fate. Here the interplay between matrix elasticity and cell morphology in regulating the chondrogenic differentiation of MSCs when seeded onto or encapsulated within hydrogels made of interpenetrating networks (IPN) of alginate and collagen type I is explored. This IPN system enables the independent control of substrate stiffness (in 2D and in 3D) and cell morphology (3D only). The expression of chondrogenic markers SOX9, ACAN, and COL2 increases when MSCs are cultured onto the soft substrate, which correlates with increased SMAD2/3 nuclear localization, enhanced MSCs condensation, and the formation of larger cellular aggregates. The encapsulation of spread MSCs within a soft IPN increases the expression of cartilage-specific genes, which is linked to cellular condensation and nuclear SMAD2/3 localization. Surprisingly, cells forced to adopt a more rounded morphology within the same soft IPNs expressed higher levels of the osteogenic markers RUNX2 and COL1. The insight provided by this study suggests that a mechanobiology informed approach to biomaterial development will be integral to the development of successful cartilage tissue engineering strategies.

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