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编号:11357829
Cartilage Engineering from Ovine Umbilical Cord Blood Mesenchymal Progenitor Cells
http://www.100md.com 《干细胞学杂志》
     a Children’s Hospital Boston,

    b Massachusetts General Hospital,

    c Harvard Medical School Center for Minimally Invasive Surgery, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

    Key Words. Cord blood cells ? Differentiation ? Fetal stem cells ? In vitro differentiation ? Stem/progenitor cell ? Stromal cells ? TGF-?1 ? Tissue regeneration

    Correspondence: Dario O. Fauza, M.D., Children’s Hospital Boston, Department of Surgery, Fegan 3, 300 Longwood Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA. Telephone: 617-919-2966; Fax: 617-730-0910; e-mail: dario.fauza@childrens.harvard.edu

    ABSTRACT

    Congenital anomalies always entail variable degrees of loss and/or malformation of tissues or organs. Treatment of the most severe cases is often limited by the scarce availability of normal grafts, especially at birth. Autologous grafting is frequently not an option in newborns due to donor-site size limitations. In addition, the well-known severe donor shortage observed in nearly all areas of transplantation is even more critical during the neonatal period. Prosthetic materials, on the other hand, may lead to infection, recurrence of the defect, and growth limitations. Recently, a novel concept in perinatal surgery was introduced, involving minimally invasive harvest of fetal tissue, which is then engineered in vitro in parallel to the remainder of gestation, so that an infant with a prenatally diagnosed birth defect can benefit from having autologous, expanded tissue readily available for surgical implantation in the neonatal period .

    Severe tracheal malformations and chest wall deformities are two examples in which engineered autologous cartilage readily available at birth, or even for prenatal repair, would be extremely beneficial, if not life-saving. We have previously shown in large animal models that tracheoplasty and chest wall reconstruction using cartilage engineered either from fetal chondrocytes or bone marrow mesenchymal cells may be viable alternatives for the treatment of these birth defects . One of the limitations of these previous studies is that neither cell source (fetal auricular biopsy or bone marrow aspiration) is easily accessible. This study was aimed at determining whether three-dimensional (3D) cartilage could be engineered from a more accessible cell source, namely umbilical cord blood (CB), and at comparing it with both engineered fetal cartilage and native tissue.

    MATERIALS AND METHODS

    Cell Morphology

    Isolated, adherent CB cells displayed fibroblast-like morphology in culture (Fig. 1). Sparsely distributed colonies were visible in the original culture after 7–10 days in growth medium. By 14–21 days, these colonies extended toward each other to approximately 80% confluence.

    Figure 1. Phase-contrast micrograph of fetal mesenchymal progenitor cells isolated from umbilical cord blood (original magnification x20).

    Construct Analysis

    Histology ? On H&E, CB constructs displayed no evidence of chondrogenic differentiation after 4 weeks in the bioreactor (Fig. 2). After 8 weeks, cell lacunae and basophilic staining were present in the extracellular matrix, in a morphological pattern compatible with ongoing chondrogenesis (Fig. 2). After 12 weeks, CB constructs exhibited evident chondrogenic differentiation by both standard and matrix-specific staining, displaying characteristics of hyaline cartilage, both grossly and microscopically (Figs. 2, 3). At that time point, each construct also contained a multicellular peripheral layer of flattened, elongated, fibroblast-like cells similar to normal perichondrium (Fig. 2).

    Figure 2. Time-dependent changes in three-dimensional umbilical cord blood mesenchymal progenitor cell constructs under defined chondrogenic medium in a bioreactor. (A): At 4 weeks, without any evidence of chondrogenic differentiation. (B): At 8 weeks, with preliminary evidence of cartilage formation, including cell lacunae and basophilic matrix staining. (C): At 12 weeks, with clear cartilage-like morphology. (D): At 12 weeks, showing a peripheral multicellular layer of flattened, elongated, fibroblast-like cells, analogous to perichondrium. (E): Native fetal hyaline cartilage from the trachea. All hematoxylin and eosin, original magnification x20.

    Figure 3. Matrix-specific stainings of three-dimensional cartilage engineered from umbilical cord blood mesenchymal progenitor cells. (A): Safranin O (for glycosaminoglycans). (B): Toluidine blue (for glycosaminoglycans). (C): Immunohistochemical staining for type I collagen, showing only peripheral positivity. (D): Immunohistochemical staining for type II collagen, showing positivity throughout the matrix. Original magnification x20.

    Further qualitative analysis of the extracellular matrix showed that CB constructs stained positively for the GAG-specific stains safranin O and toluidine blue, also in a pattern comparable with hyaline cartilage (Fig. 3). Immunostaining for type II collagen showed its presence throughout the constructs (Fig. 3). On the other hand, immunostaining for type I collagen revealed positivity only on the periphery of the constructs, in the perichondrium-like layer (Fig. 3). Native fetal hyaline cartilage specimens were essentially negative for type I collagen. Type X collagen was not detected in any of the constructs, whereas minimal staining was present at the border of endochondral ossification in the native specimens.

    Quantitative Matrix Analysis ? There was a significant time-dependent increase in the levels of GAG and type II collagen (C-II) but not of EL in CB constructs (Fig. 4). The following quantitative analyses refer to CB constructs at the 12-week time point. There were no significant differences in GAG and C-II levels between CB and fetal chondrocyte constructs, which, however, had higher EL levels. Compared with native fetal cartilage (both hyaline and elastic), C-II and EL levels were, respectively, similar and lower in the CB constructs. Native hyaline cartilage had higher GAG levels than CB constructs, which showed GAG contents comparable with those of native elastic cartilage. There were no differences in the results from each of the four donors within each time point.

    Figure 4. Quantitative extracellular matrix comparisons of different forms of engineered and native fetal cartilages. (A): Umbilical CB mesenchymal progenitor cell constructs (CB constructs) at different time points. (B): CB constructs versus chondrocyte-derived constructs. (C): CB constructs versus native elastic and hyaline cartilages. *Significant difference between the groups (p < .01). Abbreviations: C-II, type II collagen; CB, cord blood; GAG, glycosaminoglycan.

    DISCUSSION

    This study was funded by a grant from the Harvard Center of Minimally Invasive Surgery and by the Children’s Hospital Boston Surgical Foundation.

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