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      Tissue engineering of functional articular cartilage: the current status

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          Abstract

          Osteoarthritis is a degenerative joint disease characterized by pain and disability. It involves all ages and 70% of people aged >65 have some degree of osteoarthritis. Natural cartilage repair is limited because chondrocyte density and metabolism are low and cartilage has no blood supply. The results of joint-preserving treatment protocols such as debridement, mosaicplasty, perichondrium transplantation and autologous chondrocyte implantation vary largely and the average long-term result is unsatisfactory. One reason for limited clinical success is that most treatments require new cartilage to be formed at the site of a defect. However, the mechanical conditions at such sites are unfavorable for repair of the original damaged cartilage. Therefore, it is unlikely that healthy cartilage would form at these locations. The most promising method to circumvent this problem is to engineer mechanically stable cartilage ex vivo and to implant that into the damaged tissue area. This review outlines the issues related to the composition and functionality of tissue-engineered cartilage. In particular, the focus will be on the parameters cell source, signaling molecules, scaffolds and mechanical stimulation. In addition, the current status of tissue engineering of cartilage will be discussed, with the focus on extracellular matrix content, structure and its functionality.

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          Most cited references168

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          A three-dimensional nanofibrous scaffold for cartilage tissue engineering using human mesenchymal stem cells.

          The utilization of adult stem cells in tissue engineering is a promising solution to the problem of tissue or organ shortage. Adult bone marrow derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are undifferentiated, multipotential cells which are capable of giving rise to chondrocytes when maintained in a three-dimensional culture and treated with members of the transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) family of growth factors. In this study, we fabricated a nanofibrous scaffold (NFS) made of a synthetic biodegradable polymer, poly(-caprolactone) (PCL), and examined its ability to support in vitro chondrogenesis of MSCs. The electrospun PCL porous scaffold was constructed of uniform, randomly oriented nanofibers with a diameter of 700 nm, and structural integrity of this scaffold was maintained over a 21-day culture period. MSCs cultured in NFSs in the presence of TGF-beta1 differentiated to a chondrocytic phenotype, as evidenced by chondrocyte-specific gene expression and synthesis of cartilage-associated extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins. The level of chondrogenesis observed in MSCs seeded within NFSs was comparable to that observed for MSCs maintained as cell aggregates or pellets, a widely used culture protocol for studying chondrogenesis of MSCs in vitro. Due to the physical nature and improved mechanical properties of NFSs, particularly in comparison to cell pellets, the findings reported here suggest that the PCL NFS is a practical carrier for MSC transplantation, and represents a candidate scaffold for cell-based tissue engineering approaches to cartilage repair.
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            Controlled degradation and mechanical behavior of photopolymerized hyaluronic acid networks.

            Hyaluronic acid is a natural polysaccharide found abundantly throughout the body with many desirable properties for application as a biomaterial, including scaffolding for tissue engineering. In this work, hyaluronic acid with molecular weights ranging from 50 to 1100 kDa was modified with methacrylic anhydride and photopolymerized into networks with a wide range of physical properties. With macromer concentrations from 2 to 20 wt %, networks exhibited volumetric swelling ratios ranging from approximately 42 to 8, compressive moduli ranging from approximately 2 to over 100 kPa, and degradation times ranging from less than 1 day up to almost 38 days in the presence of 100 U/mL of hyaluronidase. When 3T3-fibroblasts were photoencapsulated in the hydrogels, cells remained viable with low macromer concentrations but decreased sequentially as the macromer concentration increased. Finally, auricular swine chondrocytes produced neocartilage when photoencapsulated in the hyaluronic acid networks. This work presents a next step toward the development of advanced in vivo curable biomaterials.
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              Challenges in tissue engineering.

              Almost 30 years have passed since a term 'tissue engineering' was created to represent a new concept that focuses on regeneration of neotissues from cells with the support of biomaterials and growth factors. This interdisciplinary engineering has attracted much attention as a new therapeutic means that may overcome the drawbacks involved in the current artificial organs and organ transplantation that have been also aiming at replacing lost or severely damaged tissues or organs. However, the tissues regenerated by this tissue engineering and widely applied to patients are still very limited, including skin, bone, cartilage, capillary and periodontal tissues. What are the reasons for such slow advances in clinical applications of tissue engineering? This article gives the brief overview on the current tissue engineering, covering the fundamentals and applications. The fundamentals of tissue engineering involve the cell sources, scaffolds for cell expansion and differentiation and carriers for growth factors. Animal and human trials are the major part of the applications. Based on these results, some critical problems to be resolved for the advances of tissue engineering are addressed from the engineering point of view, emphasizing the close collaboration between medical doctors and biomaterials scientists.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                k.ito@tue.nl
                Journal
                Cell Tissue Res
                Cell and Tissue Research
                Springer-Verlag (Berlin/Heidelberg )
                0302-766X
                1432-0878
                27 October 2011
                27 October 2011
                March 2012
                : 347
                : 3
                : 613-627
                Affiliations
                Department of Biomedical Engineering, Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven, Netherlands
                Article
                1243
                10.1007/s00441-011-1243-1
                3306561
                22030892
                0b920bec-c263-4546-9d4c-96a734b24b26
                © The Author(s) 2011
                History
                : 26 April 2011
                : 9 September 2011
                Categories
                Review
                Custom metadata
                © Springer-Verlag 2012

                Molecular medicine
                articular cartilage,tissue engineering,chondrocyte,signaling molecules,mechanical stimulation

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