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Cell bricks‐enriched platelet‐rich plasma gel for injectable cartilage engineering – an in vivo experiment in nude mice
Author(s) -
Zhu Jun,
Cai Bolei,
Ma Qin,
Chen Fulin,
Wu Wei
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.835
H-Index - 72
eISSN - 1932-7005
pISSN - 1932-6254
DOI - 10.1002/term.1475
Subject(s) - platelet rich plasma , tissue engineering , chemistry , chondrogenesis , in vivo , cartilage , cell , glycosaminoglycan , immunostaining , extracellular matrix , matrix (chemical analysis) , platelet , microbiology and biotechnology , biomedical engineering , pathology , anatomy , immunohistochemistry , immunology , biology , biochemistry , medicine , chromatography
Clinical application of platelet‐rich plasma (PRP)‐based injectable tissue engineering is limited by weak mechanical properties and a rapid fibrinolytic rate. We proposed a new strategy, a cell bricks‐stabilized PRP injectable system, to engineer and regenerate cartilage with stable morphology and structure  in vivo . Chondrocytes from the auricular cartilage of rabbits were isolated and cultured to form cell bricks (fragmented cell sheet) or cell expansions. Fifteen nude mice were divided evenly ( n  = 5) into cells–PRP (C‐P), cell bricks–PRP (CB‐P) and cell bricks–cells–PRP (CB‐C‐P) groups. Cells, cell bricks or a cell bricks/cells mixture were suspended in PRP and were injected subcutaneously in animals. After 8 weeks, all the constructs were replaced by white resilient tissue; however, specimens from the CB‐P and CB‐C‐P groups were well maintained in shape, while the C‐P group appeared distorted, with a compressed outline. Histologically, all groups presented lacuna‐like structures, glycosaminoglycan‐enriched matrices and positive immunostaining of collagen type II. Different from the uniform structure presented in CB‐C‐P samples, CB‐P presented interrupted, island‐like chondrogenesis and contracted structure; fibrous interruption was shown in the C‐P group. The highest percentage of matrix was presented in CB‐C‐P samples. Collagen and sGAG quantification confirmed that the CB‐C‐P constructs had statistically higher amounts than the C‐P and CB‐P groups; statistical differences were also found among the groups in terms of biomechanical properties and gene expression. We concluded that cell bricks‐enriched PRP gel sufficiently enhanced the morphological stability of the constructs, maintained chondrocyte phenotypes and favoured chondrogenesis in vivo , which suggests that such an injectable, completely biological system is a suitable cell carrier for cell‐based cartilage repair. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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