| Literature DB >> 29017608 |
Johannes Zellner1, Girish Pattappa2, Matthias Koch2, Siegmund Lang2, Johannes Weber2, Christian G Pfeifer2, Michael B Mueller2, Richard Kujat2, Michael Nerlich2, Peter Angele2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Treatment of meniscus tears within the avascular region represents a significant challenge, particularly in a situation of early osteoarthritis. Cell-based tissue engineering approaches have shown promising results. However, studies have not found a consensus on the appropriate autologous cell source in a clinical situation, specifically in a challenging degenerative environment. The present study sought to evaluate the appropriate cell source for autologous meniscal repair in a demanding setting of early osteoarthritis.Entities:
Keywords: Early osteoarthritis; Meniscal cells; Meniscus regeneration; Meniscus treatment; Mesenchymal stem cells; Tissue engineering
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29017608 PMCID: PMC5634903 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-017-0678-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Fig. 1a Macroscopic view of femoral condyles 3 months after harvesting the medial meniscus showing early osteoarthritic changes: cartilage degeneration (asterisk) and osteophyte formation (arrow) on the medial side are detectable. Scale bar = 5 mm. b Histological image of the degenerated area of the femoral condyle showing early osteoarthritis changes. Scale bar = 2 mm. c Under higher magnification an OARSI grade 3 cartilage pathology with fissures extending into the deep zone can be observed. Scale bar = 0.2 mm. The average OARSI grading of all 12 knees at 3 months was 3.1
Fig. 2Macroscopic, histological, and immunohistochemical treatment results of 2-mm circular meniscus defects in the avascular zone with meniscus cell-scaffold composites (a–h) and MSC-scaffold composites (i–p). In both groups (each n = 6), successful meniscus regeneration with differentiated repair tissue could be detected after 3 months in vivo. Most of the treated menisci show promising treatment results (images a–d, best results after meniscus cell treatment; i–l, best results after MSC treatment) with completely integrated meniscus-like regenerated tissue (e–h and m–p show the worst results of each group). Scale bars: a,e,i,m = 4 mm, b,d,f,h,j,l,n,p = 0.5 mm, c,g,k,o = 0.1 mm). a,e,i,m Macroscopic view of menisci on the tibia plateau with filled circular defects after 3 months; c,g,k,o Higher magnification of the integration zones of images b,f,j,n. d,h,l,p Collagen type II immunostaining
Fig. 3Scoring results of the repair tissue quality after 6 weeks (n = 6 rabbits) and 3 months (n = 6 rabbits) in vivo. No statistical difference was observed between the meniscal cell- and the MSC-treatment groups
Fig. 4Representative macroscopic and histological images of cell aggregates of human meniscal cells (three pellets of each donor (n = 14)) from non-refixable meniscal tears (upper row) and human mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs; three pellets of each donor (n = 6); lower row) at day 7 and day 21. The meniscal cells show no increase in size and no chondrogenic differentiation from day 7 to day 21. No positive staining for collagen II (Coll II) can be detected. Human MSC aggregates show an increase in size and chondrogenic differentiation during the culture period. At day 21 a positive staining for collagen II of the whole aggregate can be observed. Collagen I (Col I) staining was positive at the surface of the MSC pellets. Scale bars: macroscopic images = 1 mm, histological images = 0.5 mm. DMMB 1,9-dimethylmethylene blue
Fig. 5Comparison of collagen II (Col2) ELISA results of aggregates from human meniscal cells (black) (three pellets at each time point of each patient (n = 14)) and mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs; gray) (three pellets at each time point of each patient (n = 6)) after 21 days of culture in chondrogenic media. Meniscal cells from non-refixable meniscal tears show no chondrogenic potential. *P < 0.005
Fig. 6Comparison of real-time PCR analysis for collagen type II (Col2) expression of aggregates from human meniscal cells (black) (10 pellets at each time point of each donor (n = 14)) and mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs; gray) (eight pellets at each time point of each donor (n = 6)) after 21 days of culture in chondrogenic media. At day 21, MSCs showed a significantly higher relative gene expression and collagen type II upregulation compared to meniscal cells derived from non-refixable meniscal tears. *P < 0.005