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Chondrocytes in culture produce a mechanically functional tissue
Author(s) -
Fedewa Michelle M.,
Oegema Theodore R.,
Schwartz Michael H.,
MacLeod Adrienne,
Lewis Jack L.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
journal of orthopaedic research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.041
H-Index - 155
eISSN - 1554-527X
pISSN - 0736-0266
DOI - 10.1002/jor.1100160210
Subject(s) - cartilage , proteoglycan , chemistry , explant culture , ultimate tensile strength , ascorbic acid , type ii collagen , type i collagen , decorin , connective tissue , in vitro , tissue culture , biophysics , anatomy , materials science , endocrinology , biochemistry , pathology , biology , medicine , composite material , food science
Abstract A mechanically testable tissue was grown in vitro from rabbit chondrocytes that were initially plated at high density (approximately 80.000 cells/cm 2 ). The DNA, collagen, and proteoglycan content, as well as the tissue thickness, tensile stiffness, and synthesis rates, were measured at 4, 6, and 8 weeks. The biochemical properties were similar to those for immature cartilage, with predominantly type‐II collagen produced; this indicated that the cells retained their chondrocytic phenotype. The tissue formed a coherent mechanical layer with testable tensile stiffness as early as 4 weeks. The tensile elastic modulus reached 1.3 MPa at 8 weeks, which is in the range of values for native cartilage from the midzone. Collagen density was approximately 24 mg/ml at 8 weeks, which is about one‐half the value for native cartilage, and the collagen fibril diameters were smaller. Chondrocytes in culture responded to culture conditions and were stimulated by cytokine interleukin‐1β. When culture conditions were varied to RPMI nutrient medium with lower fetal bovine serum and higher ascorbic acid concentrations, the thickness decreased and the modulus increased significantly. Interleukin‐1β. added to the 8‐week culture for 2 weeks. caused a decrease of 60% in thickness, a decrease of 81% in proteoglycan content, and a decrease of 31% in collagen content; this is similar to the response of cartilage explants to interleukin‐1β. This cartilage analog may be useful as a model system to study structure‐function relationships in cartilage or as cartilage‐replacement tissue.

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