Literature DB >> 31020864

Donor-matched comparison of chondrogenic progenitors resident in human infrapatellar fat pad, synovium, and periosteum - implications for cartilage repair.

V P Mantripragada1, N S Piuzzi1,2,3, W A Bova1, C Boehm1, N A Obuchowski4, V Lefebvre5, R J Midura1, G F Muschler1,2.   

Abstract

Purpose: There is a clinical need to better characterize tissue sources being used for stem cell therapies. This study focuses on comparison of cells and connective tissue progenitors (CTPs) derived from native human infrapatellar fatpad (IPFP), synovium (SYN), and periosteum (PERI). Materials and
Methods: IPFP, SYN, PERI were harvested from twenty-eight patients undergoing arthroplasty. CTPs were quantitatively characterized using automated colony-forming-unit assay to compare total nucleated cell concentration-[Cell], cells/mg; prevalence-(PCTP), CTPs/million nucleated cells; CTP concentration-[CTP], CTPs/mg; proliferation and differentiation potential; and correlate outcomes with patient's age and gender.
Results: [Cell] did not differ between IPFP, SYN, and PERI. PCTP was influenced by age and gender: patients >60 years, IPFP and SYN had higher PCTP than PERI (p < 0.001) and females had higher PCTP in IPFP (p < 0.001) and SYN (p = 0.001) than PERI. [CTP] was influenced by age: patients <50 years, SYN (p = 0.0165) and PERI (p < 0.001) had higher [CTP] than IPFP; patients between 60 and 69 years, SYN (p < 0.001) had higher [CTP] than PERI; patients >70 years, IPFP (p = 0.006) had higher [CTP] than PERI. In patients >60 years, proliferation potential of CTPs differed significantly (SYN>IPFP>PERI); however, differentiation potentials were comparable between all three tissue sources.
Conclusion: SYN and IPFP may serve as a preferred tissue source for patients >60 years, and PERI along with SYN and IPFP may serve as a preferred tissue source for patients <60 years for cartilage repair. However, the heterogeneity among the CTPs in any given tissue source suggests performance-based selection might be useful to optimize cell-sourcing strategies to improve efficacy of cellular therapies for cartilage repair.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Progenitor cells; infrapatellar fatpad; osteoarthritis; periosteum; synovium

Year:  2019        PMID: 31020864     DOI: 10.1080/03008207.2019.1611795

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Connect Tissue Res        ISSN: 0300-8207            Impact factor:   3.417


  4 in total

1.  Influence of Glucose Concentration on Colony-Forming Efficiency and Biological Performance of Primary Human Tissue-Derived Progenitor Cells.

Authors:  Venkata P Mantripragada; Ryan Kaplevatsky; Wes A Bova; Cynthia Boehm; Nancy A Obuchowski; Ronald J Midura; George F Muschler
Journal:  Cartilage       Date:  2020-02-26       Impact factor: 3.117

Review 2.  Lipid Metabolism in Cartilage Development, Degeneration, and Regeneration.

Authors:  Zhanpeng Su; Zhixian Zong; Jinxia Deng; Jianping Huang; Guihua Liu; Bo Wei; Liao Cui; Gang Li; Huan Zhong; Sien Lin
Journal:  Nutrients       Date:  2022-09-25       Impact factor: 6.706

3.  Characterization of heterogeneous primary human cartilage-derived cell population using non-invasive live-cell phase-contrast time-lapse imaging.

Authors:  Venkata P Mantripragada; Ky-Lyn Tan; Sarinna Vasavada; Wes Bova; John Barnard; George F Muschler
Journal:  Cytotherapy       Date:  2020-10-20       Impact factor: 6.196

4.  Assessment of Clinical, Tissue, and Cell-Level Metrics Identify Four Biologically Distinct Knee Osteoarthritis Patient Phenotypes.

Authors:  Venkata P Mantripragada; Alexander Csorba; Wesley Bova; Cynthia Boehm; Nicolas S Piuzzi; Jennifer Bullen; Ronald J Midura; George F Muschler
Journal:  Cartilage       Date:  2022 Jan-Mar       Impact factor: 3.117

  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.