Co-culture of adipose-derived stem cells and chondrocytes on three-dimensionally printed bioscaffolds for craniofacial cartilage engineering

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

7-1-2018

Publication Title

The Laryngoscope

Abstract

OBJECTIVES/HYPOTHESIS: Reconstruction of craniofacial cartilagenous defects are among the most challenging surgical procedures in facial plastic surgery. Bioengineered craniofacial cartilage holds immense potential to surpass current reconstructive options, but limitations to clinical translation exist. We endeavored to determine the viability of utilizing adipose-derived stem cell-chondrocyte co-culture and three-dimensional (3D) printing to produce 3D bioscaffolds for cartilage tissue engineering. We describe a feasibility study revealing a novel approach for cartilage tissue engineering with in vitro and in vivo animal data.

METHODS: Porcine adipose-derived stem cells and chondrocytes were isolated and co-seeded at 1:1, 2:1, 5:1, 10:1, and 0:1 experimental ratios in a hyaluronic acid/collagen hydrogel in the pores of 3D-printed polycaprolactone scaffolds to form 3D bioscaffolds for cartilage tissue engineering. Bioscaffolds were cultured in vitro without growth factors for 4 weeks and then implanted into the subcutaneous tissue of athymic rats for an additional 4 weeks before sacrifice. Bioscaffolds were subjected to histologic, immunohistochemical, and biochemical analysis.

RESULTS: Successful production of cartilage was achieved using a co-culture model of adipose-derived stem cells and chondrocytes without the use of exogenous growth factors. Histology demonstrated cartilage growth for all experimental ratios at the post-in vivo time point confirmed with type II collagen immunohistochemistry. There was no difference in sulfated-glycosaminoglycan production between experimental groups.

CONCLUSION: Tissue-engineered cartilage was successfully produced on 3D-printed bioresorbable scaffolds using an adipose-derived stem cell and chondrocyte co-culture technique. This potentiates co-culture as a solution for several key barriers to a clinically translatable cartilage tissue engineering process.

LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: NA. Laryngoscope, 128:E251-E257, 2018.

Medical Subject Headings

Animals; Cartilage; Chondrocytes; Coculture Techniques; Craniofacial Abnormalities; Feasibility Studies; Immunohistochemistry; Mesenchymal Stem Cells; Printing, Three-Dimensional; Rats; Swine; Tissue Engineering; Tissue Scaffolds

PubMed ID

29668079

Volume

128

Issue

7

First Page

251

Last Page

257

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