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Platelet-rich plasma releasate differently stimulates cellular commitment toward the chondrogenic lineage according to concentration

Platelet-rich plasma has been used to treat articular cartilage defects, with the expectations of anabolic and anti-inflammatory effects. However, its role on cellular chondrogenic or fibrogenic commitment is still a controversy. Herein, the role of platelet-rich plasma releasate, the product obtain...

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Autores principales: do Amaral, Ronaldo JFC, Matsiko, Amos, Tomazette, Marcel RP, Rocha, Wanessa KR, Cordeiro-Spinetti, Eric, Levingstone, Tanya J, Farina, Marcos, O’Brien, Fergal J, El-Cheikh, Marcia C, Balduino, Alex
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4555349/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26380066
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2041731415594127
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author do Amaral, Ronaldo JFC
Matsiko, Amos
Tomazette, Marcel RP
Rocha, Wanessa KR
Cordeiro-Spinetti, Eric
Levingstone, Tanya J
Farina, Marcos
O’Brien, Fergal J
El-Cheikh, Marcia C
Balduino, Alex
author_facet do Amaral, Ronaldo JFC
Matsiko, Amos
Tomazette, Marcel RP
Rocha, Wanessa KR
Cordeiro-Spinetti, Eric
Levingstone, Tanya J
Farina, Marcos
O’Brien, Fergal J
El-Cheikh, Marcia C
Balduino, Alex
author_sort do Amaral, Ronaldo JFC
collection PubMed
description Platelet-rich plasma has been used to treat articular cartilage defects, with the expectations of anabolic and anti-inflammatory effects. However, its role on cellular chondrogenic or fibrogenic commitment is still a controversy. Herein, the role of platelet-rich plasma releasate, the product obtained following platelet-rich plasma activation, on cellular commitment toward the chondrogenic lineage was evaluated in vitro. Human nasoseptal chondrogenic cells and human bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells were used as cell types already committed to the chondrogenic lineage and undifferentiated cells, respectively, as different concentrations of platelet-rich plasma releasate were tested in comparison to commonly used fetal bovine serum. Low concentration of platelet-rich plasma releasate (2.5%) presented similar effects on cellular growth compared to 10% fetal bovine serum, for both cell types. In a three-dimensional culture system, platelet-rich plasma releasate alone did not induce full nasoseptal chondrogenic cells cartilage-like pellet formation. Nonetheless, platelet-rich plasma releasate played a significant role on cell commitment as high-passage nasoseptal chondrogenic cells only originated cartilage-like pellets when expanded in the presence of platelet-rich plasma releasate rather than fetal bovine serum. Histological analyses and measurements of pellet area demonstrated that even low concentrations of platelet-rich plasma releasate were enough to prevent nasoseptal chondrogenic cells from losing their chondrogenic potential due to in vitro expansion thereby promoting their recommitment. Low concentration of platelet-rich plasma releasate supplemented in chondrogenic medium also increased the chondrogenic potential of mesenchymal stromal cells seeded on collagen-hyaluronic acid scaffolds, as observed by an increase in chondrogenic-related gene expression, sulfated glycosaminoglycan production, and compressive modulus following in vitro culture. On the contrary, higher concentration of platelet-rich plasma releasate (10%) hampered some of these features. In conclusion, platelet-rich plasma releasate was able to prevent cellular chondrogenic capacity loss, inducing regain of their phenotype, and modulate cell commitment. Our data support the hypothesis of platelet-rich plasma chondrogenic potential, allowing fetal bovine serum substitution for platelet-rich plasma releasate at specific concentrations in culture medium when chondrogenic commitment is desired on specific cell types and moments of culture.
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spelling pubmed-45553492015-09-15 Platelet-rich plasma releasate differently stimulates cellular commitment toward the chondrogenic lineage according to concentration do Amaral, Ronaldo JFC Matsiko, Amos Tomazette, Marcel RP Rocha, Wanessa KR Cordeiro-Spinetti, Eric Levingstone, Tanya J Farina, Marcos O’Brien, Fergal J El-Cheikh, Marcia C Balduino, Alex J Tissue Eng Original Article Platelet-rich plasma has been used to treat articular cartilage defects, with the expectations of anabolic and anti-inflammatory effects. However, its role on cellular chondrogenic or fibrogenic commitment is still a controversy. Herein, the role of platelet-rich plasma releasate, the product obtained following platelet-rich plasma activation, on cellular commitment toward the chondrogenic lineage was evaluated in vitro. Human nasoseptal chondrogenic cells and human bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells were used as cell types already committed to the chondrogenic lineage and undifferentiated cells, respectively, as different concentrations of platelet-rich plasma releasate were tested in comparison to commonly used fetal bovine serum. Low concentration of platelet-rich plasma releasate (2.5%) presented similar effects on cellular growth compared to 10% fetal bovine serum, for both cell types. In a three-dimensional culture system, platelet-rich plasma releasate alone did not induce full nasoseptal chondrogenic cells cartilage-like pellet formation. Nonetheless, platelet-rich plasma releasate played a significant role on cell commitment as high-passage nasoseptal chondrogenic cells only originated cartilage-like pellets when expanded in the presence of platelet-rich plasma releasate rather than fetal bovine serum. Histological analyses and measurements of pellet area demonstrated that even low concentrations of platelet-rich plasma releasate were enough to prevent nasoseptal chondrogenic cells from losing their chondrogenic potential due to in vitro expansion thereby promoting their recommitment. Low concentration of platelet-rich plasma releasate supplemented in chondrogenic medium also increased the chondrogenic potential of mesenchymal stromal cells seeded on collagen-hyaluronic acid scaffolds, as observed by an increase in chondrogenic-related gene expression, sulfated glycosaminoglycan production, and compressive modulus following in vitro culture. On the contrary, higher concentration of platelet-rich plasma releasate (10%) hampered some of these features. In conclusion, platelet-rich plasma releasate was able to prevent cellular chondrogenic capacity loss, inducing regain of their phenotype, and modulate cell commitment. Our data support the hypothesis of platelet-rich plasma chondrogenic potential, allowing fetal bovine serum substitution for platelet-rich plasma releasate at specific concentrations in culture medium when chondrogenic commitment is desired on specific cell types and moments of culture. SAGE Publications 2015-07-07 /pmc/articles/PMC4555349/ /pubmed/26380066 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2041731415594127 Text en © The Author(s) 2015 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 License (http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access page (http://www.uk.sagepub.com/aboutus/openaccess.htm).
spellingShingle Original Article
do Amaral, Ronaldo JFC
Matsiko, Amos
Tomazette, Marcel RP
Rocha, Wanessa KR
Cordeiro-Spinetti, Eric
Levingstone, Tanya J
Farina, Marcos
O’Brien, Fergal J
El-Cheikh, Marcia C
Balduino, Alex
Platelet-rich plasma releasate differently stimulates cellular commitment toward the chondrogenic lineage according to concentration
title Platelet-rich plasma releasate differently stimulates cellular commitment toward the chondrogenic lineage according to concentration
title_full Platelet-rich plasma releasate differently stimulates cellular commitment toward the chondrogenic lineage according to concentration
title_fullStr Platelet-rich plasma releasate differently stimulates cellular commitment toward the chondrogenic lineage according to concentration
title_full_unstemmed Platelet-rich plasma releasate differently stimulates cellular commitment toward the chondrogenic lineage according to concentration
title_short Platelet-rich plasma releasate differently stimulates cellular commitment toward the chondrogenic lineage according to concentration
title_sort platelet-rich plasma releasate differently stimulates cellular commitment toward the chondrogenic lineage according to concentration
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4555349/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26380066
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2041731415594127
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