Katarzyna Styczynska-Soczka1, Anish K Amin2, A Hamish W Simpson2, Andrew C Hall1. 1. Biomedical Sciences, Edinburgh Medical School, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK. 2. Department of Trauma and Orthopaedic Surgery, Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Articular cartilage is incapable of effective repair following injury or during osteoarthritis. While there have been developments in cartilage repair technologies, there is a need to advance biologically relevant models for preclinical testing of biomaterial and regenerative therapies. This study describes conditions for the effective ex vivo culture of the whole human femoral head. DESIGN: Fresh, viable femoral heads were obtained from femoral neck fractures and cultured for up to 10 weeks in (a) Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM); (b) DMEM + mixing; (c) DMEM + 10% human serum (HS); (d) DMEM + 10% HS + mixing. The viability, morphology, volume, and density of fluorescently labelled in situ chondrocytes and cartilage surface roughness were assessed by confocal microscopy. Cartilage histology was studied for glycosaminoglycan content using Alcian blue and collagen content using picrosirius red. RESULTS: Chondrocyte viability remained at >95% in DMEM + 10% HS. In DMEM alone, viability remained high for ~4 weeks and then declined. For the other conditions, superficial zone chondrocyte viability fell to <35% at 10 weeks with deeper zones being relatively unaffected. In DMEM + 10% HS at 10 weeks, the number of chondrocytes possessing cytoplasmic processes increased compared with DMEM (P = 0.017). Alcian blue labeling decreased (P = 0.02) and cartilage thinned (P ≤ 0.05); however, there was no change to surface roughness, chondrocyte density, chondrocyte volume, or picrosirius red labeling (P > 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: In this ex vivo model, chondrocyte viability was maintained in human femoral heads for up to 10 weeks in culture, a novel finding not previously reported. This human model could prove invaluable for the exploration, development, and assessment of preclinical cartilage repair and regenerative therapies.
OBJECTIVE: Articular cartilage is incapable of effective repair following injury or during osteoarthritis. While there have been developments in cartilage repair technologies, there is a need to advance biologically relevant models for preclinical testing of biomaterial and regenerative therapies. This study describes conditions for the effective ex vivo culture of the whole human femoral head. DESIGN: Fresh, viable femoral heads were obtained from femoral neck fractures and cultured for up to 10 weeks in (a) Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM); (b) DMEM + mixing; (c) DMEM + 10% human serum (HS); (d) DMEM + 10% HS + mixing. The viability, morphology, volume, and density of fluorescently labelled in situ chondrocytes and cartilage surface roughness were assessed by confocal microscopy. Cartilage histology was studied for glycosaminoglycan content using Alcian blue and collagen content using picrosirius red. RESULTS: Chondrocyte viability remained at >95% in DMEM + 10% HS. In DMEM alone, viability remained high for ~4 weeks and then declined. For the other conditions, superficial zone chondrocyte viability fell to <35% at 10 weeks with deeper zones being relatively unaffected. In DMEM + 10% HS at 10 weeks, the number of chondrocytes possessing cytoplasmic processes increased compared with DMEM (P = 0.017). Alcian blue labeling decreased (P = 0.02) and cartilage thinned (P ≤ 0.05); however, there was no change to surface roughness, chondrocyte density, chondrocyte volume, or picrosirius red labeling (P > 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: In this ex vivo model, chondrocyte viability was maintained in human femoral heads for up to 10 weeks in culture, a novel finding not previously reported. This human model could prove invaluable for the exploration, development, and assessment of preclinical cartilage repair and regenerative therapies.
Articular cartilage has very poor regenerative potential following injury and the
repair tissue formed is mechanically weak, and has a fibro-cartilaginous, rather
than the resilient load-bearing extracellular matrix (ECM) of hyaline cartilage.
Furthermore, the native regeneration potential of cartilage declines with age
and while fibro-cartilaginous repair can be observed to form within injured
hyaline cartilage, it is more evident when the injury has penetrated the subchondral
bone.[1,3] The reasons for
the production of mechanically incompetent repair tissue are not well understood,
and clearly there is intense interest in developing more effective biomaterial and
regenerative therapies for cartilage repair. However, current models are not optimal
and usually involve preparations ranging from in vitro cultures of
cells, through to osteochondral explants
and ex vivo and in vivo models of mainly
animal (i.e., nonhuman) joints.[5,6] The research and development of
more effective cartilage repair and regenerative therapies would be enhanced by the
ability to preclinically evaluate novel strategies in ex vivo
physiological, tribological models of natural joints.While there have been many detailed studies on explant and organ culture of animal
osteochondral tissue (e.g., Lin et al.
), few studies have conducted experiments directly on human tissue. The
limited studies using human cartilage for experimentation have obtained the material
as discarded, and frequently degenerate osteochondral tissue (e.g., during joint
replacement surgery for osteoarthritis).
To test orthobiological treatments for human cartilage repair, the use of
healthy cartilage is essential. However, this source of material is difficult to
obtain and relies on collaboration between clinicians, theatre staff, and research
scientists. While normal human cartilage may be obtained from amputations, trauma
victims, or occasionally cadavers, such material is rarely available for wider
adoption into experimental human cartilage research. Ex vivo organ
culture is becoming increasingly important for basic and applied biomedical research
because it is more representative of normal cellular behavior. However, obtaining a
steady supply of viable human tissue, which then has to be cultured for weeks under
aseptic conditions, remains a challenging research area.Femoral neck fractures are one of the most common surgically treated injuries in
elderly patients. The human femoral head is discarded during the surgery undertaken
to treat femoral neck fractures and is replaced with an artificial prosthesis. While
this discarded femoral head is aged, it is generally nondegenerate. We hypothesized
that the human femoral head would be a viable source of normal, nondegenerate
articular cartilage suitable for preclinical cartilage research and regenerative
therapies. We were able to coordinate the timely, sterile collection and delivery of
the discarded human femoral head from the operating theatre to the laboratory. The
aim of this study was to optimize the culture conditions for fresh human femoral
heads from femoral neck fractures to permit viable long-term (10 weeks) culture.
Methods
Human Femoral Heads
Femoral heads were obtained with ethical permission (Tissue Governance, National
Health Service, Lothian) and patient consent from 15 patients (11 females, 4
males, mean age 75.5 years [range 56-88 years]) undergoing hemiarthroplasty or
total hip replacement for femoral neck fracture (FNF). Femoral heads were
carefully removed intraoperatively by a qualified orthopedic surgeon using a
corkscrew device and immediately placed into a sterile container with saline
(0.9% w/v; 21°C) to prevent chondrocyte death from drying.
Femoral heads were then transferred to a sterile container with
Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s medium (DMEM) with d-glucose (25 mM),
l-glutamine (4 mM), pyruvate (1 mM), 100 U/mL penicillin, 100 µg/mL
streptomycin, 2.5 mg/mL amphotericin B (Sigma-Aldrich, Irvine, UK), and 10 µg/mL
FunginTM (InvivoGen, Toulouse, France) ready for transportation
to the laboratory with the femoral heads being available for experiments within
1 to 2 hours.
Culture Conditions
Femoral heads were maintained in culture (37°C) in sealed single use sterile
containers and media changed every 3 days and the container replaced with every
media change. Media volume for each femoral head was ~50 to 60 mL. Male femoral
heads were larger than those of females (diameter typically 6 cm vs. 4.5 cm) and
required larger culture containers. The femoral heads were cultured for up to 10
weeks under the following conditions: (a) static culture in DMEM, (b) culture in
DMEM with movement (DMEM + mixing), (c) as for (a) above + 10% normal human
serum (HS; Merck, Feltham, UK), and (d) as for (b) above + 10% HS. A cavity was
carved in the cancellous bone of the femoral head for a magnetic stirring bar
using bone trimmers (
). Containers were then placed on a magnetic mixer inside the incubator
and stirring was programmed for 1 hour, twice daily at ~1 Hz. The rationale for
studying the effects of movement was based on our proof of concept bovine model
where joint movement promoted chondrocyte viability.The cavity produced in the cancellous bone of the human femoral head to
accommodate the magnetic bar for stirring culture experiments.
Cartilage Sampling, Fluorescent Labeling of In Situ
Chondrocytes and Confocal Microscopy
Full depth cartilage explants were harvested using 3- or 5-mm diameter biopsy
punches (Kai Medical, Solingen, Germany) for weekly chondrocyte viability
measurements. To minimize the variability, explants were taken from random areas
within the load-bearing parafoveal superior region
(
). Cartilage samples were then incubated (1.5 hours; 21°C) with CMFDA
(5-chloromethylfluorescein diacetate) Cell Tracker green and propidium iodide
(PI) (12.5 and 10 µM, respectively; Invitrogen, Paisley, UK) to label living
(green) and dead (red) cells respectively.
Explants were washed in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS; Invitrogen,
Paisley, UK), fixed (formaldehyde 4%v/v; 30 minutes; Fisher, Leicestershire, UK)
and imaged in 3 dimensions by confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) using
established methods.Localisation of the cartilage area on human femoral heads used for
sampling. (A) Lateral view of the femoral head, fovea (F) on the upper
left, (B) Top view of the femoral head, (C) Femoral head with biopsy
explants taken from within the specified zone. Scale bar represents
25mm.
Measurements of Chondrocyte Viability, Density, Volume, and
Morphology
Confocal projected axial views were analyzed using ImageJ/FIJI (National
Institutes of Health) and IMARIS software (Zurich, Switzerland) as described.
Chondrocyte viability (% live cells) was calculated as: the number of
CMFDA-labeled cells/(number of CMFDA-labeled cells + number of PI-labeled cells)
in a given region of interest (ROI) volume. For chondrocyte density, the total
number of cells (CMFDA-labeled and PI-labeled) in the ROI volume were counted in
IMARIS, and results given as cells/μm
. Chondrocyte volumes were obtained using the IMARIS “Surfaces” algorithm.
Volume calibration was performed using fluorescent microspheres (Polysciences,
Warrington, PA, USA). Chondrocyte morphology was considered “normal” if cells
were visualized as having a “smooth” surface and elliptical/rounded shape.
“Abnormal” chondrocytes exhibited at least one CMFDA-labeled cytoplasmic process
≥2 μm long. Abnormal cells were counted manually and divided by the total number
of live cells in the field of view with results presented as the % abnormal
cells in the whole cell population within the ROI.
Histology, Cartilage Thickness, and Surface Roughness
Explants were frozen (−80°C) in a freezing medium (1:1 optimal temperature
cutting compound with 30% w/v sucrose in PBS for histology.[13,14] The plugs
were then cut into 40 µm sections and stained with Alcian blue (Vector
Laboratories Ltd, Peterborough, UK) to label cartilage glycosaminoglycans (GAGs)
according to manufacturer’s instructions. For picrosirius red staining of
collagens, sections of 10 µm thickness were first stained with hematoxylin for 8
minutes, then washed 3 to 4 times in distilled water. This was followed by
1-hour incubation in 0.1% picrosirius red (Direct Red 80, Sigma-Aldrich, Irvine,
UK) in picric acid (VWR International, Lutterworth, UK). Sections were washed
briefly 2 times in 0.5% acetic acid, dehydrated (2 washes in ethanol absolute
followed by 1 wash in xylene) and mounted in resinous mounting medium.
Histological sections were imaged on a Leica bright field microscope and
analyzed with ImageJ/FIJI software.
After converting the images to greyscale 8-bit pixel depth, the same
intensity threshold was set for each pair of sections (week 0
vs. week 10). The stained area above the threshold was
measured and presented as a % of the total sectional area. Cartilage thickness
measurements were performed on the coronal sections of cartilage using
ImageJ/FIJI. For the surface roughness measurements, the ImageJ/FIJI Analyse
Stripes macro was used on the images of histologically stained sections.
Calculation of cartilage surface roughness was based on the deviation from an
idealized smooth cartilage surface and expressed as Rq (the root mean square
[RMS] deviation) in micrometers (µm).
Data Presentation and Statistical Analysis
Statistical analyses were performed using Graphpad Prism version 8.2.1 (GraphPad
Software, La Jolla, CA, USA). Data were presented as
(N(n)), with N
representing the number of independent femoral heads and n the
total number of replicates. Each data point presented on graphs and used for
statistical analyses was an average (±SD or SEM as indicated) of the replicates
taken from each femoral head. Unless otherwise stated, paired Student’s
t tests were used to compare differences within pairs of
treatment groups or time points, and analysis of variance (ANOVA) used to
compare differences across several groups. A significant difference was accepted
when P < 0.05.
Results
Cartilage Grading and Chondrocyte Viability
Femoral heads were macroscopically assessed using an established system.
For all femoral heads considered suitable, the cartilage was grade 0 over
>75% of the surface, with small isolated grade 1 lesions in the parafoveal
area (which were <25% of the surface area). The isolated areas of grade 1
cartilage (mild surface fibrillation) were not studied and only cartilage of
grade 0 was used.Chondrocyte viability was assessed on day 1 and any femoral heads with a
viability of <80% were excluded. Out of a total of 24 femoral heads received,
5 were excluded due to low initial chondrocyte viability and a further 4 were
also excluded as they developed infection during subsequent culture. In the
remaining 15 femoral heads, the cell viability was 95.3% ± 5.3%
(N(n) = 15(60)) on day 1. Chondrocyte
viability in femoral heads cultured under static conditions in DMEM remained
high (>90%) for ~4 weeks but decreased to 44.0% ± 22.3% by week 10
(N(n) = 4(16), one-way ANOVA, posttest for
trend, P = 0.045,
). This decrease in cell viability was accelerated with movement of the
femoral head and stirring of the media with virtually no viable cells by week 6
(2-way ANOVA; P = 0.0099,
). The addition of 10% HS to DMEM maintained chondrocyte viability at
>90% to week 10 under static femoral head culture conditions (
) but did not significantly improve the viability in femoral head
cultures with movement/stirring over 10 weeks.The viability of in situ human chondrocytes within
femoral head cartilage cultured under various conditions. (A) DMEM
N(n) = 4(16); DMEM + mixing (N(n) = 3(12)). (B) DMEM + normal human
serum (HS); (N(n) = 3(12)), DMEM + mixing + human serum (N(n) = 2(8));
error bars represent S.E.M. (or S.D. for N = 2). (C) Representative
images of viability staining (CMFDA green – live cells, PI red – dead
cells) at week 10 for DMEM, DMEM + 10% human serum and DMEM + mixing;
scale bars represent 100µm.CLSM permits 3-dimensional imaging and quantitative analyses of chondrocyte
viability within the full depth of cartilage.
To assess if chondrocytes within any zone were more sensitive during
culture, chondrocyte viability was determined as a function of depth from the
articular surface. We compared the percentage cell viability within the
different zones (superficial [SZ], middle [MZ], and deep [DZ]) in coronal
sections of articular cartilage at week 10 compared with baseline (week 0).
There was a decrease in the SZ viability in both culture conditions (DMEM only,
and DMEM + mixing; [P = 0.0425 and P = 0.016,
respectively;
]) with relative preservation of cell viability in deeper cartilage zones (
). This suggests that SZ chondrocytes were far more sensitive to the
culture conditions compared with the cells in the deeper zones. Thus, although
there were few living SZ cells remaining after 10 weeks, a substantial portion
of chondrocytes in the other zones were still viable.Viability of chondrocytes in various zones after 10 weeks of femoral head
culture (A) Comparison of chondrocyte viability in the whole thickness
vs superficial zone at week 10 of culture. DMEM N(n) = 4(16),
*p = 0.0425, DMEM + mixing, N(n) = 3(12),
*p = 0.016 (data shown as mean ± S.E.M.). (B)
Representative coronal images of labelled chondrocytes within cartilage
sections cultured in DMEM on day 0 (left panel), and after 10 weeks of
culture in DMEM + mixing + HS on week 10 (right panel). The scale bars
represent 100µm.
Chondrocyte Morphology
In fresh explants of macroscopically nondegenerate femoral head cartilage, a
small population (8.0% ± 1.5%; N(n)=4(8)) of
cells in the SZ (~100 µm from the surface) demonstrated one or more cytoplasmic
processes (
and
). During femoral head culture in DMEM, there appeared to be an increase
in the % of cells with processes (to 15% ± 5.3% by week 6,
N(n) = 4(16)) and (16% ± 6.4% by week 10,
N(n) = 4(16)); however, these changes were
not significantly different compared with week 0 (ANOVA; P >
0.05). In contrast, in the presence of HS, the % of chondrocytes with processes
increased to 31% ± 9.3% by week 6 (P = 0.008;
N(n) = 3(12)) and 37% ± 7.1% by week 10
(P = 0.002; N(n) = 3(12))
compared with week 0 (
). By week 10, there were significantly more (by >2-fold;
P = 0.017) chondrocytes with cytoplasmic processes when
femoral heads were cultured in DMEM + HS compared with DMEM alone (
).Changes to the morphology of in situ femoral head
chondrocytes during culture. Panel (A) shows the % of cells with
cytoplasmic processes at three time points (weeks 0, 6 and 10) in
cultures with DMEM (N(n) = 4(16)) and DMEM + human normal human serum
(HS) (N(n) = 3(12)). (Data shown as mean ± S.D.). Panel (B) shows
representative images of cell stained with CMFDA Cell Tracker green to
visualise chondrocyte morphology, and propidium iodide (PI) red to
identify dead cells. The top row of images is from DMEM cultures, (left
to right panels for weeks 0, 6 and 10 respectively), the bottom row of
images for DMEM + human serum (left to right panels for weeks 0, 6 and
10 respectively. Note examples of chondrocytes with cellular processes
indicated by white arrowheads. The scale bar represents 100µm.
Extracellular Matrix Composition
To evaluate whether extracellular matrix composition changed during culture, two
histological stainings were performed on cartilage samples (week 0 and week 10)
and analyzed semiquantitatively. There was a general trend of decreasing GAG
staining using Alcian blue
under all culture conditions, but in DMEM + HS chondrocyte viability was
significantly higher (
). In these cultures, 50.0% ± 2.7%
(N(n) = 3(6)) of the section area was stained
with Alcian blue at week 0. This decreased to 17.0% ± 13.8% by week 10
(N(n) = 3(6); P = 0.028).
The total collagen stained with picrosirius red did not show any significant
difference between DMEM and DMEM + HS samples at week 0 and week 10 (30% ± 5%
vs. 42% ± 22%, N(n) = 11(22);
P = 0.09). These results suggest a significant loss of GAGs
but no change to the total collagen content of femoral head cartilage during
this culture period.Histology of femoral head cartilage with time in culture. (A) GAG content
in various culture conditions, (a) DMEM N(n) = 4(8), (b) DMEM + mixing
N(n) = 4(8), (c) DMEM + 10% human serum N(n) = 3(6),
*p = 0.028. (B) Cartilage thickness in various culture
conditions, (a) DMEM N(n) = 4(24), (b) DMEM + mixing N(n) = 4(24), (c)
DMEM + 10% human serum N(n) = 3(18), (p = 0.05;
p = 0.02; p = 0.02 respectively).
(Data shown as mean ± S.E.M.). (C) Representative images for Alcian blue
staining of DMEM + human serum on week 0 (left panel) and week 10 (right
panel).
Cartilage Thickness and Surface Roughness
In parallel with the loss of GAGs, cartilage thickness was reduced after 10 weeks
in culture (
). In DMEM cultures, it decreased from 3808 ± 425 µm to 2828 ± 542 µm
(P = 0.05; N(n) = 4(22)).
In the DMEM + mixing culture, it declined from 4226 ± 418 µm to 2703 ± 720 µm
(P = 0.02; N(n) = 4(15)),
and in DMEM + 10% HS it decreased from 3377 ± 360 µm to 2349 ± 160 µm
(P = 0.02; N(n) = 3(22)).
Articular surface roughness assessed on the same femoral heads at week 0 and
week 10 was not significantly different (13 ± 0.6 µm and 15 ± 0.7 µm,
respectively (P = 0.55; N(n)
= 9(9);
)).Surface roughness, chondrocyte density and volume of in situ femoral head
chondrocytes with time in culture in DMEM + HS. (A) Surface roughness
expressed as the root mean square (RMS) deviation)) in µm at week 0 and
week 10, N(n) = 3(9), p = 0.2). (B) Cell density (total
number of chondrocytes per mm3) at week 0 and week 10,
N(n) = 3(60), p = 0.22. (C) Chondrocyte volume at week
0 and week 10, N(n) = 3(44), p = 0.22. Broken lines illustrate pairs of
data at week 0 and week 10 for each femoral head. (Data shown as mean ±
S.D.).
Chondrocyte Density and Volume
There was no difference in cell density for all the samples at week 0 (9971 ±
2389 cells/mm3, N(n) = 15(60))
compared with week 10 (11256 ± 3305 cells/mm3; P =
0.01; N(n) = 15(60);
). In situ chondrocyte volume was also analyzed as it
correlates with the progression of cartilage degeneration; however, there was no
difference (P = 0.22) between the cell volumes of chondrocytes
on day 0 (423 ± 49 µm
, N(n) = 15(60) and week 10 (441 ± 48 µm
, N(n) = 15(60);
).
Discussion
We have established culture conditions that maintain chondrocyte viability during
ex vivo culture of human femoral heads for 10 weeks by
supplementing standard culture medium with 10% normal HS. We have identified an
excellent and reliable source of viable, nondegenerate human articular cartilage
ideal for ex vivo experimentation. Previously, we have investigated
the microscopic effects of mechanical and other forms of injury on human articular
cartilage.[9,19] However material was obtained from tissue discarded during knee
replacement for osteoarthritis and the yield of nondegenerate tissue was often low.
This was because the majority of the tissue was osteoarthritic with loss of
superficial zone cells, even if macroscopically the tissue may have appeared
nondegenerate. In contrast, the cartilage of the femoral head discarded after
femoral neck fracture was in most cases nondegenerate and our experiments have
confirmed the presence of viable cartilage tissue that is macroscopically and
microscopically ideally suited for investigating cartilage repair and regeneration.
Due to the excellent chondrocyte viability throughout culture, the model may also
allow ex vivo validation of an optimal combination of cells, growth
factors, and scaffolds that lead to the formation of repair tissue resembling the
desirable hyaline articular cartilage at the microscopic level.Current knowledge of the microscopic quality of cartilage repair tissue in humans is
based on histological assessment of opportunistic biopsy specimens retrieved during
“second look” arthroscopy (keyhole surgery). While these specimens have provided
valuable insight into the quality of cartilage repair, with so-called “hyaline-like”
composition, the information is limited by small numbers of specimens, distortion of
the tissue during biopsy, variability in the site/size of biopsies and heterogeneity
of the study sample. The lack of a noninvasive method of evaluating the microscopic
characteristics of the quality of the cartilage repair tissue has also been
recognized as a major problem limiting advances in cartilage repair and regenerative
techniques by the International Cartilage Repair Society (ICRS).
Modern imaging techniques (e.g., CLSM) allow microscopic examination of
articular cartilage by optically sectioning the tissue. We believe that the
significantly easier access to normal, human cartilage ex vivo will
help overcome the problems associated with in vivo biopsy, and
allow detailed quantitative microscopic assessment and optimization of the quality
of cartilage repair. The proposed model will significantly enhance our ability to
test a wide range of preclinical therapeutic cartilage repair and regenerative
strategies directly in human tissue so that the best candidate therapies can be
identified for subsequent clinical study.In our model, the large area of grade 0 cartilage (
) permitted multiple samples to be taken either at a single time point, or a
smaller number over a longer time course. A gap between samples was retained so that
cutting trauma using the biopsy punch
did not influence neighboring samples. Furthermore, if cartilage wells were
to contain biological models for testing, then it would be possible for the full
depth sample to be “scooped” out using a fine scalpel blade. Chondrocyte viability
in both axial and coronal projections was initially high for all samples (
). There was no change in viability during DMEM + HS culture, suggesting that
taking multiple cartilage plugs over the 10-week period did not adversely affect the
viability of the surrounding cartilage. It should be noted that if serum (HS) was
used, then it must be heat-treated because it contains enzymes that digest the DNA
of dead cells leading to an underestimation of the dead cell population.[22,23]Femoral head culture in DMEM maintained chondrocyte viability for ~4 weeks after
which there was an increase in chondrocyte death (
). With mixing, viability decreased progressively after the start of the
culture, such that by week 10 there were virtually no remaining viable cells.
Furthermore, cell death started in the SZ so that after 10 weeks, all these
chondrocytes were dead whereas those in the deeper zones were still viable (
). This suggests that there are factors in bone supporting chondrocyte
viability in the SZ that were washed out during media changes. The importance of
bone in cultures of bovine cartilage has been reported previously as SZ chondrocyte
viability was maintained in cartilage cultures when bone was present either when
attached to the explants or in co-culture.
This was in contrast to deep zone chondrocytes which survived, and the
relative viability of these chondrocytes within the femoral head cartilage of our
elderly patients (
) parallels the long-term (~25 years) survival of DZ chondrocytes in
osteochondral allografts used for the treatment of focal posttraumatic defects in
young individuals.
It is possible that these chondrocytes are well adapted to this relatively
hostile environment for example chondrocytes in the DZ utilize different membrane
transport systems for the regulation of intracellular acidity compared with cells in
the SZ.
The addition of HS in the mixed DMEM condition provided some protection for
SZ chondrocytes as cell viability by week 10 was 35% (
). However, if there was no mixing and HS was present, there was complete
chondrocyte protection suggesting that serum was protecting the cells that were
vulnerable during the latter stages of the culture. While the cross-talk between
subchondral bone and cartilage has received considerable attention,
the factor(s) released from bone and/or present in the serum that promote
chondrocyte viability are unclear, with TGFβ (transforming growth factor-β), IGF-1
(insulin-like growth factor-1), and BMP (bone morphogenetic protein) being implicated.Visualisation of fluorescently labeled in situ chondrocytes revealed
the classical morphology of elliptical cells in the SZ with the more spheroidal
forms in the deeper zones (
).
In grade 0 cartilage in axial projections, a small proportion (~8%) of the SZ
cells (within ~100 µm depth) exhibited cytoplasmic processes. Of interest was that
after 10 wks of culture in DMEM + HS, there was a significant (>4-fold) increase
in the percentage of cells exhibiting processes (
). At week 10, significantly (by >2-fold) more chondrocytes demonstrated a
cytoplasmic process when HS was present compared with culture in DMEM alone.
However, in the DMEM + HS condition, chondrocyte viability and density did not
change during culture (
and
, respectively), whereas in DMEM alone viability had decreased by ~50% (
) but abnormal chondrocytes were still present (
). The changes to chondrocyte shape might be related to the properties of the
ECM. In healthy cartilage, the pore size of the proteoglycan (PG) network is ~3 nm
whereas that for collagen is ~100 nm and thus the PGs will regulate cartilage
permeability and solute diffusivity.
GAG loss during unloading will increase matrix permeability and thus potent
growth factors, etc., in serum will start to penetrate and act particularly on SZ
chondrocytes, which are normally shielded by the tight matrix. The development of
processes and subsequent abnormal morphology of chondrocytes is a feature associated
with de-differentiation to a fibroblastic phenotype[30,31] and has been observed in
osteoarthritic tibial and femoral head cartilage.[17,32,33] A change in phenotype is
characterised by decreased hyaline cartilage-specific collagen type II and aggrecan
production, and an increase in collagen type I production. It would be of particular
interest to determine if physiological levels of loading could reverse some of these
changes and protect the chondrocyte phenotype and promote the production of a
hyaline cartilage.There was no evidence of chondrocyte clustering
under any of the experimental conditions. Nomura et al.
did not observe changes to chondrocyte morphology in mice subjected to
hindlimb unloading when cartilage was studied by histology. This might appear to
conflict with the changes to chondrocyte morphology reported here. However, the
detection of the fine cytoplasmic process is not possible with their histological
techniques as they involve tissue shrinkage
and high-resolution imaging of unperturbed in situ
chondrocyes is essential for the visualization of the processes.[17,31]It might be considered that a limitation in our study was that no mechanical load was
applied to the femoral heads. However, this revealed that after 10 weeks there were
features of the cartilage ECM and in situ chondrocytes that bear
similarities to the changes observed with both in vivo and
in vitro cartilage disuse atrophy. Alcian blue staining
reflecting GAG content was decreased (
and
). This was not significant in the DMEM and DMEM + mixing conditions when
there was substantial chondrocyte death (~50% and 100%, respectively). However,
interestingly, the decrease was significant in the DMEM + HS condition (
) when cell viability was high (>95%). This suggests that there was an
active chondrocyte-driven process mediating reduced GAG levels.
GAG loss would probably account for the cartilage thinning (
), reported by others using animal joint immobilization models.
GAG loss did not, however, affect surface roughness (
), which is in contrast to the changes occurring in OA, where GAG levels
decrease and surface roughness and cartilage fibrillation increase.
Palmoski et al.
noted a similar decrease in PG staining in healthy adult dogs after ~6 days
of immobilization and by 8 weeks there was a 30% to 50% reduction in cartilage
thickness with an almost complete loss of PG. In human joints immobilized as a
result of ankle fracture, there was a 6.6% loss of cartilage thickness over 7 weeks
following fracture.
The loss of GAGs is thought to be due to a reduction in synthesis as well as
the stimulation of chondrocyte degradative enzyme (MMP-13, ADAMTS5)
activity[35,37] from a mechano-adaptive response to reduced load. Mechanical
loading of joints is a key parameter for maintaining the differentiated, rounded,
chondrocyte phenotype.[40,41] Recent studies implicate an essential role for the
mechanosensitive ion channel Transient Receptor Potential Vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) in the
signal transduction pathway. Inhibiting TRPV4 prevents loading-mediated increases in
matrix synthesis, whereas activating TRPV4 in the absence of loading increases
matrix synthesis in a manner analogous to loading.While there were changes to GAG labeling, there was no change to picrosirius red
labeling suggesting the cartilage collagen content remained unaltered throughout
culture. While picrosirius red does not discriminate between the collagen types,
it is possible that there were changes to collagen metabolism and/or its
organization. For example, while total collagen content might not have changed
significantly, it is possible that there was a decrease in the collagen type II:
type I ratio reflecting chondrocyte de-differentiation. In addition, changes to
collagen fiber distribution/orientation could be evident, and future studies
utilising polarized light microscopy would be worth pursuing. A small decrease in
collagen cross-linking, which recovers after remobilization, has been reported
and the immobilization of rabbit knee joint leads to a partial shift in the
density of collagen composition from type II to type I.
However, in human cartilage, there is negligible/minimal collagen turnover
over the lifetime in a healthy joint.There was no change to the volume of in situ chondrocytes following
10-weeks of culture in DMEM + HS (
). It is likely that with the loss of GAGs, interstitial osmolarity of the
matrix would decrease, leading to hypo-osmolarity and cell swelling. However,
in situ chondrocytes possess effective volume-regulatory
channels and transporters[47,48] and over a long time period, despite the change in osmolarity,
these mechanisms could compensate leading to no volume change. This phenomenon
(termed isovolumetric volume regulation [IVR]) has been described in various cell
types, including chondrocytes.
The lack of chondrocyte swelling is in contrast to that observed in
osteoarthritic cartilage where increased chondrocyte volume/hypertrophy has been
reported.[17,50]This study described the first successful ex vivo culture of a large
human joint. In situ chondrocyte viability remained high in DMEM +
HS; however, it decreased under the other conditions tested. Although chondrocyte
viability was optimal, there were changes to the matrix (cartilage thinning, GAG
loss, no change to collagen or surface roughness) and chondrocytes (development of
cytoplasmic processes, no change to volume or density). This preclinical model may
be an invaluable addition for the assessment of human cartilage repair therapies and
may replace some animal studies.
Authors: K P H Pritzker; S Gay; S A Jimenez; K Ostergaard; J-P Pelletier; P A Revell; D Salter; W B van den Berg Journal: Osteoarthritis Cartilage Date: 2005-10-19 Impact factor: 6.576