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Chondrogenic induction of mesenchymal stromal/stem cells from Wharton’s jelly embedded in alginate hydrogel and without added growth factor: an alternative stem cell source for cartilage tissue engineering

Authors :
Jean-François Stoltz
Hao Yu
Céline Huselstein
Naceur Charif
Jessica Schiavi
Léonore Leger
Loïc Reppel
Astrid Pinzano
Danièle Bensoussan
Christel Henrionnet
Ingénierie Moléculaire et Physiopathologie Articulaire (IMoPA)
Université de Lorraine (UL)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
Centre Hospitalier Régional Universitaire de Nancy (CHRU Nancy)
Bioingénierie Moléculaire, Cellulaire et Thérapeutique (BMCT)
Source :
Stem Cell Research and Therapy, Stem Cell Research and Therapy, BioMed Central, 2015, 6 (1), pp.260. ⟨10.1186/s13287-015-0263-2⟩, Stem Cell Research & Therapy
Publisher :
Springer Nature

Abstract

Background Due to their intrinsic properties, stem cells are promising tools for new developments in tissue engineering and particularly for cartilage tissue regeneration. Although mesenchymal stromal/stem cells from bone marrow (BM-MSC) have long been the most used stem cell source in cartilage tissue engineering, they have certain limits. Thanks to their properties such as low immunogenicity and particularly chondrogenic differentiation potential, mesenchymal stromal/stem cells from Wharton’s jelly (WJ-MSC) promise to be an interesting source of MSC for cartilage tissue engineering. Methods In this study, we propose to evaluate chondrogenic potential of WJ-MSC embedded in alginate/hyaluronic acid hydrogel over 28 days. Hydrogels were constructed by the original spraying method. Our main objective was to evaluate chondrogenic differentiation of WJ-MSC on three-dimensional scaffolds, without adding growth factors, at transcript and protein levels. We compared the results to those obtained from standard BM-MSC. Results After 3 days of culture, WJ-MSC seemed to be adapted to their new three-dimensional environment without any detectable damage. From day 14 and up to 28 days, the proportion of WJ-MSC CD73+, CD90+, CD105+ and CD166+ decreased significantly compared to monolayer marker expression. Moreover, WJ-MSC and BM-MSC showed different phenotype profiles. After 28 days of scaffold culture, our results showed strong upregulation of cartilage-specific transcript expression. WJ-MSC exhibited greater type II collagen synthesis than BM-MSC at both transcript and protein levels. Furthermore, our work highlighted a relevant result showing that WJ-MSC expressed Runx2 and type X collagen at lower levels than BM-MSC. Conclusions Once seeded in the hydrogel scaffold, WJ-MSC and BM-MSC have different profiles of chondrogenic differentiation at both the phenotypic level and matrix synthesis. After 4 weeks, WJ-MSC, embedded in a three-dimensional environment, were able to adapt to their environment and express specific cartilage-related genes and matrix proteins. Today, WJ-MSC represent a real alternative source of stem cells for cartilage tissue engineering.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17576512
Volume :
6
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Stem Cell Research & Therapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....89c1c6a70a92ab2952424cd3a4cb00a6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13287-015-0263-2