| Literature DB >> 29739472 |
Zhaofeng Jia1,2,3, Qisong Liu2,3, Yujie Liang4,5, Xingfu Li2,3, Xiao Xu1,2,3, Kan Ouyang2,3, Jianyi Xiong2,3, Daping Wang6,7,8, Li Duan9,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The role of rabbit synovial fluid-derived mesenchymal stem cells (rbSF-MSCs) in cartilage defect repair remains undefined. This work evaluates the in vivo effects of rbSF-MSCs to repair knee articular cartilage defects in a rabbit model.Entities:
Keywords: Autologous; Cartilage defect; Cellular therapy; Chondrogenic differentiation; Intra-articular injection; Mesenchymal stem cells; Rabbit synovial fluid
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29739472 PMCID: PMC5941664 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-018-1485-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Primers used for real-time PCR
| Gene name | Primer sequence |
|---|---|
| GAPDH | Forward: 5′-GGAGAAAGCTGCTAA-3′ |
| Reverse:5′-ACGACCTGGTCCTCGGTGTA-3′ | |
| Runx2 | Forward: 5′-TATGAAAAACCAAGTAGCAAGGTTC-3′ |
| Reverse: 5′-GTAATCTGACTCTGTCCTTGTGGAT-3′ | |
| Osteocalcin | Forward: 5′-GTGCAGAGTCCAGCAAAGGT-3′ |
| Reverse: 5′-CTAGCCAACTCGTCACAGTC-3′ | |
| Col2A1 | Forward: 5′-CAGGCAGAGGCAGGAAACTAAC-3′ |
| Reverse: 5′-CAGAGGTGTTTGACACGGAGTAG-3′ | |
| Sox9 | Forward: 5′-GTACCCGCACCTGCACAAC-3′ |
| Reverse: 5′-TCCGCCTCCTCCACGAAG-3′ | |
| PPARγ | Forward: 5′-GACCACTCCCACTCCTTTGA-3′ |
| Reverse: 5′-CGACATTCAATTGCCATGAG-3′ | |
| LPL | Forward: 5′-TACAGGGCGGCCACAAGTTTT-3′ |
| Reverse: 5′-ATGGAGAGCAAAGCCCTGCTC-3′ |
Fig. 1Cell morphology observed by microscope. A Colonies formed on the plate (passage 1), B Passage 2 cells, C Passage 4 cells. Scale bar = 100 μm
Fig. 2Cell surface marker analysis by flow cytometry. Passage 5 rbSF-MSCs were positive for CD44 (95.4%), CD73 (96.8%), and CD90 (95.4%), and negative for CD31 (2.8%), CD34 (1.2%), and CD45 (0.16%)
Fig. 3Trilineage differentiation of rbSF-MSCs characterized by histological staining. a, d Alizarin red staining for osteogenic differentiation; b, e oil red O staining for adipogenic differentiation; c, f toduiline staining for chondrogenic differentiation. Scale bar = 100 μm
Fig. 4Trilineage differentiation of rbSF-MSCs characterized by qRT-PCR analysis. a, d Induced rbSF-MSCs had much higher levels of the osteogenic marker gene (Runx2 and Osteocalcin) than control cells. b, e Induced rbSF-MSCs had up-regulatd PPARγ and LPL compared with control cells. c, f Chondrogenic differentiation markers (Col2A1, Sox9) were significantly increased after induction compared to the control. Gene expression was normalized to GAPDH, and obtained from at least three independent experiments. (****P < 0.0001)
Fig. 5Macroscopic assessment of repaired cartilage. A–F Photographs of rabbit knee articular defects 8 and 12 weeks after cell injection. Black dotted circles indicate the original defect margin. G, H ICRS macroscopic scores of repaired cartilage at 8 and 12 weeks. Data are presented as mean ± SD (n = 6, **P < 0.01, ****P < 0.0001)
Fig. 6Histological evaluation of repaired cartilage. A–L Representative H&E and toluidine blue staining of repaired cartilage at 8 and 12 weeks. Scale bar: 100 μm. M, N ICRS Visual Histological Assessment Scale for repaired cartilage at 8 (M) and 12 (N) weeks. Data are presented as mean ± SD (n = 6; *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001)
Fig. 7Immuno-histological staining of Collagen I. A–C Representative Collagen I staining of repaired cartilage at 12 weeks. a–c Enlarged image of the dashed box in A–C, respectively. Scale bar: 100 μm
Fig. 8Immuno-histological staining of Collagen II. A–C Representative Collagen II staining of repaired cartilage at 12 weeks. a–c Enlarged image of the dashed box in A–C, respectively. Scale bar: 100 μm