| Literature DB >> 34940323 |
Yisi Liu1,2,3,4,5, Meng Wang2, Yixuan Luo2, Qianyi Liang2, Yin Yu2, Fei Chen2, Jun Yao1,3,4,5.
Abstract
Stem cells hold tremendous promise for the treatment of cartilage repair in osteoarthritis. In addition to their multipotency, stem cells possess immunomodulatory effects that can alleviate inflammation and enhance cartilage repair. However, the widely clinical application of stem cell therapy to cartilage repair and osteoarthritis has proven difficult due to challenges in large-scale production, viability maintenance in pathological tissue site and limited therapeutic biological activity. This review aims to provide a perspective from hydrogel-focused approach to address few key challenges in stem cell-based therapy for cartilage repair and highlight recent progress in advanced hydrogels, particularly microgels and dynamic hydrogels systems for improving stem cell survival, retention and regulation of stem cell fate. Finally, progress in hydrogel-assisted gene delivery and genome editing approaches for the development of next generation of stem cell therapy for cartilage repair in osteoarthritis are highlighted.Entities:
Keywords: cartilage repair; hydrogel; osteoarthritis; stem cell
Year: 2021 PMID: 34940323 PMCID: PMC8701810 DOI: 10.3390/gels7040263
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gels ISSN: 2310-2861
Figure 1Schematic description of utilizing injectable microgels and bioadhesive hydrogels to increase cell survival and retention. (Created with BioRender.com).
Figure 2(A) MSCs-loading supramolecular hydrogels applied for cartilage tissue regeneration; (B) Chemical structures of injectable HA hydrogels crosslinked by host-guest interaction between β -Cd and Ad, (C) Supramolecular hydrogels carrying MSCs showed better chondrogenic efficiency than MSCs only group, according to the relative quantification of mRNA levels for chondrogenic markers at days 14 and 28 (n = 4, * p < 0.05, *** p < 0.001) [44].
Figure 3Schematic description of materials-mediated gene delivery and genetically engineered MSCs for cartilage repair and osteoarthritis. (Created with BioRender.com).
Comparison of MSCs behavior with different delivery method.
| Delivery Method | Characteristic |
|---|---|
| Direct in vivo gene injection or indirect in vitro | Imprecise and transient transgenic expression, harmful side effects |
| Direct delivery using the combination of vectors and matrix | Efficient and durable cell transfection, regulation of pathological |
| CRISPR/Cas9-mediated gene editing | Able to achieve ‘designer cells’ with feedback functions, |