| Literature DB >> 32160923 |
Zhou Jiang1, Sijing Yu1, Hengyi Lin1, Ruiye Bi2.
Abstract
Cartilage-derived pluripotent cells reside in hyaline cartilage and fibrocartilage. These cells have the potential for multidirectional differentiation; can undergo adipogenesis, osteogenesis, and chondrogenesis; and have been classified as mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) conforming to the minimal criteria of the International Society for Cellular Therapy. Cartilage tissue is prone to injury and is difficult to repair. As cartilage-derived pluripotent cells are the closest cell source to cartilage tissue, they are expected to have the strongest ability to differentiate into cartilage compared to other MSCs. This review focuses on the organizational distribution, expression, and function of cartilage-derived pluripotent cells in joint development and repair to help explore the therapeutic potential of in situ cartilage-derived pluripotent cells for joint cartilage repair.Entities:
Keywords: Cartilage repair; Cartilage-derived pluripotent cell; Chondroprogenitor cell; Stem cell transplantation; Stem cell-based therapy
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32160923 PMCID: PMC7066750 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-020-01604-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Fig. 1Zonal structure of cartilage. a Hyaline cartilage is compartmentalized into the surface zone, middle zone, deep zone, and calcified zone. b Fibrocartilage in TMJ condyle is divided into four distinct zones: the fibrous SZ, a polymorphic zone, a zone of chondrocytes, and a zone of hypertrophic chondrocytes
Fig. 2Organizational distribution of cartilage-derived pluripotent cells. Cartilage-derived pluripotent cells are mainly isolated from human, bovine, murine, and rabbit, where these pluripotent cells are located in each species is shown
Cartilage-derived pluripotent cell-based therapies for joint cartilage repair
| Cartilage | Cell | Source | Species | Model | Mode of action | Study/evaluation | In vivo/in vitro | Result | Conclusion | Year | Author |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hyaline cartilage | Autologous chondroprogenitor cells | Articular cartilage | Equine | 15 mm cartilage defects on the medial trochlear ridge of the femur | A graft: autologous chondroprogenitor cells transplanted in a fibrin matrix | Lameness (pain), arthroscopic, radiographic, gross, histologic, and immunohistochemical analyses | In vivo | Improved the amount of type II collagen and decreased central osteophyte formation | Had significantly better repair tissue | 2015 | Frisbie et al. [ |
| Chondroprogenitors | Articular cartilage | Goat | A circular 6 mm defect in the lateral femoral condyle | A graft: Chondro-Gide® membrane seeded with goat chondroprogenitors | Immunohistological and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analyses, routine histology and immunocytochemistry analyses, repair tissue grading | In vivo | Positive collagen type II and aggrecan labeling, repair scores for chondroprogenitors ranged from 7 (abnormal) to 10 (nearly normal) | Formed a cartilage-like repair tissue | 2010 | Williams et al. [ | |
| Chondroprogenitor cells | Hyaline cartilage | Sheep | Growth plate defects at the margin of the medial aspect of the proximal tibiae | A graft: endochondrally ossifiying cartilage from the peripheral margin of the secondary center of ossification and the adjacent zone of Ranvier tissue | Radiological assessment of longitudinal growth, histological analysis | In vivo | Endochondral ossification continued and no shortening no deformity resulted | Survived and persisted as cartilaginous tissue but was unable to restore, repair or function as a growth plate | 1994 | Wirth et al. [ | |
| Chondroprogenitor cells | Articular cartilage | Bovine | Thigh muscle of severe-combined immunodeficient (SCID) mice | Intramuscular injection | Cryosectioning and PCR analyses | In vivo | Expressed sox9 and type II collagen | Survived but failed to create a robust cartilage pellet | 2014 | Marcus et al. [ | |
| Meniscus | Cartilage-derived progenitor cells (C-PCs) | Knee articular cartilage | Human | A radial tear in the inner anterior horn of the rat meniscus | An explant organ culture | Tissue immunohistochemistry and staining, messenger RNA expression, cell surface marker, stem cell differentiation and western blot analyses | In vitro | Elevated sox9 expression, maintained lower expression of type X collagen, resisted cellular hypertrophy and terminal differentiation, mobilized in response to chemokine signaling SDF-1/CXCR4 axis | Had the reparative ability to bridge and reintegrate torn meniscal fibrocartilage | 2019 | Jayasuriya et al. [ |
| Meniscus-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MMSCs) | Medial and lateral menisci | Rabbit | A wound with 1 mm diameter in the center of each meniscus | An explant organ culture and a graft: the Matrigel with cells used for implantation into nude rat skin | Histochemistry, immunocytochemistry, real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) and western blotting analyses | In vivo and in vitro | A pronounced tendency to chondrogenic differentiation, homing traits, more formation of cartilage-related proteins | Served as an alternative cell therapy in repairing damaged meniscus | 2015 | Ding and Huang [ | |
| Human meniscus stem/progenitor cells (hMeSPCs) | Meniscus | Human | The removal of the anterior half of the rat medial meniscus and an experimental OA model | Intra-articular injection | Evaluation of multipotent differentiation potential, colony formation assay and expression analysis of meniscus-related genes, chemotaxis assay, cell labeling and detection, histology, transmission electron microscopy and immunostaining analyses | In vivo | More neo-tissue formation and better-defined shape but also resulted in more rounded cells and matured extracellular matrix, reduced expression of OA markers such as collagen I, collagen X, and hypoxia-inducible factor 2a (HIF-2a) but increased expression of collagen II | Enhanced the regeneration of injured meniscus through induced cell homing via the SDF-1/CXCR4 chemokine axis | 2014 | Shen et al. [ | |
| Allogenous meniscus-derived stem cells (MeSCs) | Meniscus | Rabbit | The removal of the anterior half of the rabbit medial meniscus and a rabbit early experimental OA model | Intra-articular injection | Cell labeling and detection, radiographic evaluation, histology, immunohistochemistry, transmission electron microscopy, real-time PCR, biomechanical evaluation | In vivo | Did not elicit immunological rejection, but promoted neo-tissue formation with better-defined shape and more matured extracellular matrix, further protected joint surface cartilage and maintained joint space | Evoked a new strategy for articular cartilage protection and meniscus regeneration | 2013 | Shen et al. [ | |
| Chondrocyte-derived progenitor cells (CDPCs) | Knee articular cartilage | Human | Large knee cartilage defects (6–13 cm2) in 15 patients | A graft: a collagen type I/III scaffold seeded with the CDPCs | Clinical evaluation, MRI evaluation, histology, pain and functional evaluation | In vivo | Significantly improved IKDC and Lysholm scores, the presence of chondrocyte-like cells and hyaline cartilage-like structure and matrix, reduced knee pain and swelling, and disappeared locking sensation | Supported the possibility of using in vitro the amplified CDPCs, for joint repair | 2016 | Jiang et al. [ | |
| TMJ condyle | Fibrocartilage stem cells (FCSCs) | TMJ condyle | Rat | A 2.5 mm perforation in the rabbit TMJ disc bilaterally and secondary OA | Intra-articular injection of the Wnt inhibitor sclerostin (SOST) | Histology, histomorphometry, and fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analyses | In vivo | Sustained the FCSC pool, improved TMJ gross morphology and proteoglycan distribution, reduced joint swelling | Exploited endogenous FCSCs to regenerate and repair cartilage | 2016 | Embree et al. [ |