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Mechano-Hypoxia Conditioning of Engineered Human Meniscus

Meniscus fibrochondrocytes (MFCs) experience simultaneous hypoxia and mechanical loading in the knee joint. Experimental conditions based on these aspects of the native MFC environment may have promising applications in human meniscus tissue engineering. We hypothesized that in vitro “mechano-hypoxi...

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Autores principales: Szojka, Alexander R. A., Li, David Xinzheyang, Sopcak, Malou E. J., Ma, Zhiyao, Kunze, Melanie, Mulet-Sierra, Aillette, Adeeb, Samer M., Westover, Lindsey, Jomha, Nadr M., Adesida, Adetola B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8446439/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34540817
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2021.739438
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author Szojka, Alexander R. A.
Li, David Xinzheyang
Sopcak, Malou E. J.
Ma, Zhiyao
Kunze, Melanie
Mulet-Sierra, Aillette
Adeeb, Samer M.
Westover, Lindsey
Jomha, Nadr M.
Adesida, Adetola B.
author_facet Szojka, Alexander R. A.
Li, David Xinzheyang
Sopcak, Malou E. J.
Ma, Zhiyao
Kunze, Melanie
Mulet-Sierra, Aillette
Adeeb, Samer M.
Westover, Lindsey
Jomha, Nadr M.
Adesida, Adetola B.
author_sort Szojka, Alexander R. A.
collection PubMed
description Meniscus fibrochondrocytes (MFCs) experience simultaneous hypoxia and mechanical loading in the knee joint. Experimental conditions based on these aspects of the native MFC environment may have promising applications in human meniscus tissue engineering. We hypothesized that in vitro “mechano-hypoxia conditioning” with mechanical loading such as dynamic compression (DC) and cyclic hydrostatic pressure (CHP) would enhance development of human meniscus fibrocartilage extracellular matrix in vitro. MFCs from inner human meniscus surgical discards were pre-cultured on porous type I collagen scaffolds with TGF-β3 supplementation to form baseline tissues with newly formed matrix that were used in a series of experiments. First, baseline tissues were treated with DC or CHP under hypoxia (HYP, 3% O(2)) for 5 days. DC was the more effective load regime in inducing gene expression changes, and combined HYP/DC enhanced gene expression of fibrocartilage precursors. The individual treatments of DC and HYP regulated thousands of genes, such as chondrogenic markers SOX5/6, in an overwhelmingly additive rather than synergistic manner. Similar baseline tissues were then treated with a short course of DC (5 vs 60 min, 10–20% vs 30–40% strain) with different pre-culture duration (3 vs 6 weeks). The longer course of loading (60 min) had diminishing returns in regulating mechano-sensitive and inflammatory genes such as c-FOS and PTGS2, suggesting that as few as 5 min of DC was adequate. There was a dose-effect in gene regulation by higher DC strains, whereas outcomes were inconsistent for different MFC donors in pre-culture durations. A final set of baseline tissues was then cultured for 3 weeks with mechano-hypoxia conditioning to assess mechanical and protein-level outcomes. There were 1.8–5.1-fold gains in the dynamic modulus relative to baseline in HYP/DC, but matrix outcomes were equal or inferior to static controls. Long-term mechano-hypoxia conditioning was effective in suppressing hypertrophic markers (e.g., COL10A1 10-fold suppression vs static/normoxia). Taken together, these results indicate that appropriately applied mechano-hypoxia conditioning can support meniscus fibrocartilage development in vitro and may be useful as a strategy for developing non-hypertrophic articular cartilage using mesenchymal stem cells.
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spelling pubmed-84464392021-09-18 Mechano-Hypoxia Conditioning of Engineered Human Meniscus Szojka, Alexander R. A. Li, David Xinzheyang Sopcak, Malou E. J. Ma, Zhiyao Kunze, Melanie Mulet-Sierra, Aillette Adeeb, Samer M. Westover, Lindsey Jomha, Nadr M. Adesida, Adetola B. Front Bioeng Biotechnol Bioengineering and Biotechnology Meniscus fibrochondrocytes (MFCs) experience simultaneous hypoxia and mechanical loading in the knee joint. Experimental conditions based on these aspects of the native MFC environment may have promising applications in human meniscus tissue engineering. We hypothesized that in vitro “mechano-hypoxia conditioning” with mechanical loading such as dynamic compression (DC) and cyclic hydrostatic pressure (CHP) would enhance development of human meniscus fibrocartilage extracellular matrix in vitro. MFCs from inner human meniscus surgical discards were pre-cultured on porous type I collagen scaffolds with TGF-β3 supplementation to form baseline tissues with newly formed matrix that were used in a series of experiments. First, baseline tissues were treated with DC or CHP under hypoxia (HYP, 3% O(2)) for 5 days. DC was the more effective load regime in inducing gene expression changes, and combined HYP/DC enhanced gene expression of fibrocartilage precursors. The individual treatments of DC and HYP regulated thousands of genes, such as chondrogenic markers SOX5/6, in an overwhelmingly additive rather than synergistic manner. Similar baseline tissues were then treated with a short course of DC (5 vs 60 min, 10–20% vs 30–40% strain) with different pre-culture duration (3 vs 6 weeks). The longer course of loading (60 min) had diminishing returns in regulating mechano-sensitive and inflammatory genes such as c-FOS and PTGS2, suggesting that as few as 5 min of DC was adequate. There was a dose-effect in gene regulation by higher DC strains, whereas outcomes were inconsistent for different MFC donors in pre-culture durations. A final set of baseline tissues was then cultured for 3 weeks with mechano-hypoxia conditioning to assess mechanical and protein-level outcomes. There were 1.8–5.1-fold gains in the dynamic modulus relative to baseline in HYP/DC, but matrix outcomes were equal or inferior to static controls. Long-term mechano-hypoxia conditioning was effective in suppressing hypertrophic markers (e.g., COL10A1 10-fold suppression vs static/normoxia). Taken together, these results indicate that appropriately applied mechano-hypoxia conditioning can support meniscus fibrocartilage development in vitro and may be useful as a strategy for developing non-hypertrophic articular cartilage using mesenchymal stem cells. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-09-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8446439/ /pubmed/34540817 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2021.739438 Text en Copyright © 2021 Szojka, Li, Sopcak, Ma, Kunze, Mulet-Sierra, Adeeb, Westover, Jomha and Adesida. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Bioengineering and Biotechnology
Szojka, Alexander R. A.
Li, David Xinzheyang
Sopcak, Malou E. J.
Ma, Zhiyao
Kunze, Melanie
Mulet-Sierra, Aillette
Adeeb, Samer M.
Westover, Lindsey
Jomha, Nadr M.
Adesida, Adetola B.
Mechano-Hypoxia Conditioning of Engineered Human Meniscus
title Mechano-Hypoxia Conditioning of Engineered Human Meniscus
title_full Mechano-Hypoxia Conditioning of Engineered Human Meniscus
title_fullStr Mechano-Hypoxia Conditioning of Engineered Human Meniscus
title_full_unstemmed Mechano-Hypoxia Conditioning of Engineered Human Meniscus
title_short Mechano-Hypoxia Conditioning of Engineered Human Meniscus
title_sort mechano-hypoxia conditioning of engineered human meniscus
topic Bioengineering and Biotechnology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8446439/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34540817
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2021.739438
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