| Literature DB >> 29214173 |
Tongguang Xiao1,2, Weimin Guo1, Mingxue Chen1, Chunxiang Hao3, Shuang Gao4, Jingxiang Huang1, Zhiguo Yuan1, Yu Zhang1, Mingjie Wang1, Penghao Li1, Jiang Peng1, Aiyuan Wang1, Yu Wang1, Xiang Sui1, Li Zhang1, Wenjing Xu1, Shibi Lu1, Heyong Yin1, Jianhua Yang2, Shuyun Liu1, Quanyi Guo1.
Abstract
The scaffold is a key element in cartilage tissue engineering. The components of Wharton's jelly are similar to those of articular cartilage and it also contains some chondrogenic growth factors, such as insulin-like growth factor I and transforming growth factor-β. We fabricated a tissue-engineered cartilage scaffold derived from Wharton's jelly extracellular matrix (WJECM) and compared it with a scaffold derived from articular cartilage ECM (ACECM) using freeze-drying. The results demonstrated that both WJECM and ACECM scaffolds possessed favorable pore sizes and porosities; moreover, they showed good water uptake ratios and compressive moduli. Histological staining confirmed that the WJECM and ACECM scaffolds contained similar ECM. Moreover, both scaffolds showed good cellular adherence, bioactivity, and biocompatibility. MTT and DNA content assessments confirmed that the ACECM scaffold tended to be more beneficial for improving cell proliferation than the WJECM scaffold. However, RT-qPCR results demonstrated that the WJECM scaffold was more favorable to enhance cellular chondrogenesis than the ACECM scaffold, showing more collagen II and aggrecan mRNA expression. These results were confirmed indirectly by glycosaminoglycan and collagen content assessments and partially confirmed by histology and immunofluorescent staining. In conclusion, these results suggest that a WJECM scaffold may be favorable for future cartilage tissue engineering.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29214173 PMCID: PMC5682092 DOI: 10.1155/2017/5839071
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Macroscopic view presenting the surface appearance of WJECM and ACECM scaffolds.
Primer sequences of target genes used for RT-qPCR.
| Target gene | Primer sequence | NCBI accession number |
|---|---|---|
| GAPDH | F: 5′-CAAGAAGGTGGTGAAGCAGG-3′ | NM_001082253.1 |
| Collagen I | F: 5′-GCCACCTGCCAGTCTTTACA-3′ | NM_001195668.1 |
| Collagen II | F: 5′-CACGCTCAAGTCCCTCAACA-3′ | XM_002723438.1 |
| Collagen X | F: 5′-CCACCAGGACAAGCAGTCAT-3′ | XM_002714724.1 |
| Sox-9 | F: 5′-GCGGAGGAAGTCGGTGAAGAAT-3′ | XM_002719499 |
| Aggrecan | F: 5′-GGAGGAGCAGGAGTTTGTCAA-3′ | XM_002723376.1 |
Sox-9, (sex determining region Y)-box 9.
Figure 2SEM image showing the surface structures of WJECM and ACECM scaffolds. The white arrow indicates that nanofibrous ACECM and WJECM in the both various scaffolds.
The physicochemical properties between ACECM and WJECM scaffold. Results are reported as mean fold change ± SD from three independent experiments. p < 0.05.
| Characteristic | ACECM scaffolds | WJECM scaffolds |
|---|---|---|
| Mean pore size ( | 193.6 ± 62.1 | 127.4 ± 42.2 |
| Porosity (%) | 75.7 ± 10.5 | 84.6 ± 3.2 |
| Water swelling ratio | 31.1 ± 5.5 | 16.7 ± 2.3 |
| Compressive modulus (Pa) | 297.9 ± 17.9 | 379.2 ± 28.5 |
Figure 3Component identification in WJECM and ACECM scaffolds. Toluidine blue staining and safranin O staining were positive; type I and type II collagen immunofluorescence showed positive staining (scale bar = 200 μm).
Figure 4MTT assay showing the proliferation of chondrocytes cultured in WJECM and ACECM scaffolds in comparison with the control group after 0, 2, 4, and 6 days of culture (n = 6). Both WJECM and ACECM scaffolds showed favorable cell proliferation rates.
Figure 5SEM analysis showing chondrocyte adhesion on both WJECM and ACECM scaffolds after 3 days in culture.
Figure 6Live/dead cell staining of chondrocytes cultured on WJECM and ACECM scaffolds 7 and 14 days after seeding. The live cell number increased from days 7 to 14 in both groups. Regarding live cell numbers, the two scaffolds showed no significant difference at day 7 and day 14 (scale bar = 200 μm).
Figure 7DNA, sGAG, and collagen production by chondrocytes cultured on WJECM and ACECM scaffolds 7 and 14 days after seeding. Data represent the mean ± SD of three independent experiments. p < 0.05.
Figure 8RT-qPCR gene expression analyses of chondrocytes cultured on WJECM and ACECM scaffolds 7 and 14 days after seeding. All data were normalized to the corresponding GAPDH value at 7 and 14 days after seeding (ΔC) and further normalized to the ΔC value of the target gene in the control (2−ΔΔCT). Results are reported as mean fold change ± SD from three independent experiments. p < 0.05.
Figure 9Histological and immunofluorescent staining of chondrocytes cultured on WJECM and ACECM scaffolds 7 and 14 days after seeding (scale bar = 200 μm). H&E staining showed that the cells were distributed evenly and secreted ECM in both of the scaffolds. Safranin O and toluidine blue staining showed that chondrocytes in the WJECM scaffold showed more intense staining than those in the ACECM scaffold at 7 or 14 days. At 7 and 14 days, both scaffolds were positive for collagen I, collagen II, and aggrecan.