Crosslinkable Hydrogels Derived from Cartilage, Meniscus, and Tendon Tissue

Publication date

2015-04-01

Authors

Visser, JetzeISNI 0000000507260822
Levett, Peter A.
Te Moller, Nikae C RORCID 0000-0001-8675-330XISNI 0000000492512440
Besems, Jeremy
Boere, Kristel W MISNI 0000000387070169
van Rijen, Mattie H. P.
de Grauw, JohannaISNI 0000000397213987
Dhert, W.J.A.ISNI 0000000393516139
van Weeren, RenéORCID 0000-0002-6654-1817ISNI 0000000390951215
Malda, JosORCID 0000-0002-9241-7676ISNI 0000000388144393

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Document Type

Article
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taverne

Abstract

Decellularized tissues have proven to be versatile matrices for the engineering of tissues and organs. These matrices usually consist of collagens, matrix-specific proteins, and a set of largely undefined growth factors and signaling molecules. Although several decellularized tissues have found their way to clinical applications, their use in the engineering of cartilage tissue has only been explored to a limited extent. We set out to generate hydrogels from several tissue-derived matrices, as hydrogels are the current preferred cell carriers for cartilage repair. Equine cartilage, meniscus, and tendon tissue was harvested, decellularized, enzymatically digested, and functionalized with methacrylamide groups. After photo-cross-linking, these tissue digests were mechanically characterized. Next, gelatin methacrylamide (GelMA) hydrogel was functionalized with these methacrylated tissue digests. Equine chondrocytes and mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) (both from three donors) were encapsulated and cultured in vitro up to 6 weeks. Gene expression (COL1A1, COL2A1, ACAN, MMP-3, MMP-13, and MMP-14), cartilage-specific matrix formation, and hydrogel stiffness were analyzed after culture. The cartilage, meniscus, and tendon digests were successfully photo-cross-linked into hydrogels. The addition of the tissue-derived matrices to GelMA affected chondrogenic differentiation of MSCs, although no consequent improvement was demonstrated. For chondrocytes, the tissue-derived matrix gels performed worse compared to GelMA alone. This work demonstrates for the first time that native tissues can be processed into crosslinkable hydrogels for the engineering of tissues. Moreover, the differentiation of encapsulated cells can be influenced in these stable, decellularized matrix hydrogels.

Keywords

MESENCHYMAL STEM-CELLS, GELATIN METHACRYLATE HYDROGELS, MULTIPOTENT STROMAL CELLS, EXTRACELLULAR-MATRIX, IN-VITRO, ARTICULAR-CARTILAGE, COLLAGEN TYPE, CHONDROGENIC DIFFERENTIATION, CANINE CHONDROCYTES, BONE REGENERATION, Taverne

Citation

Visser, J, Levett, P A, te Moller, N C R, Besems, J, Boere, K W M, van Rijen, M H P, de Grauw, J C, Dhert, W J A, van Weeren, P R & Malda, J 2015, 'Crosslinkable Hydrogels Derived from Cartilage, Meniscus, and Tendon Tissue', Tissue Engineering. Part A, vol. 21, no. 7-8, pp. 1195-1206. https://doi.org/10.1089/ten.tea.2014.0362