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The regulation of expanded human nasal chondrocyte re-differentiation capacity by substrate composition and gas plasma surface modification

Woodfield, T. B. F. and Miot, S. and Martin, I. and van Blitterswijk, C. A. and Riesle, J.. (2006) The regulation of expanded human nasal chondrocyte re-differentiation capacity by substrate composition and gas plasma surface modification. Biomaterials, 27 (7). pp. 1043-1053.

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Abstract

Optimizing re-differentiation of clinically relevant cell sources on biomaterial substrates in serum containing (S+) and serum-free (SF) media is a key consideration in scaffold-based articular cartilage repair strategies. We investigated whether the adhesion and post-expansion re-differentiation of human chondrocytes could be regulated by controlled changes in substrate surface chemistry and composition in S+ and SF media following gas plasma (GP) treatment. Expanded human nasal chondrocytes were plated on gas plasma treated (GP+) or untreated (GP-) poly(ethylene glycol)-terephthalate-poly(butylene terephthalate) (PEGT/PBT) block co-polymer films with two compositions (low or high PEG content). Total cellularity, cell morphology and immunofluorescent staining of vitronectin (VN) and fibronectin (FN) integrin receptors were evaluated, while post-expansion chondrogenic phenotype was assessed by collagen types I and II mRNA expression. We observed a direct relationship between cellularity, cell morphology and re-differentiation potential. Substrates supporting high cell adhesion and a spread morphology (i.e. GP+ and low PEG content films), resulted in a significantly greater number of cells expressing alpha(5)beta(1) FN to alpha(V)beta(3) VN integrin receptors, concomitant with reduced collagen type II/I mRNA gene expression. Substrates supporting low cell adhesion and a spherical morphology (GP- and high PEG content films) promoted chondrocyte redifferentiation indicated by high collagen type II/I gene expression and a low percentage of alpha(5)beta(1) FN integrin expressing cells. This study demonstrates that cell-substrate interactions via alpha(5)beta(1) FN integrin mediated receptors negatively impacts expanded human nasal chondrocyte re-differentiation capacity. GP treatment promotes cell adhesion in S + media but reverses the ability of low PEG content PEGT/PBT substrates to maintain chondrocyte phenotype. We suggest alternative cell immobilization techn
Faculties and Departments:03 Faculty of Medicine > Departement Biomedizin > Department of Biomedicine, University Hospital Basel > Tissue Engineering (Martin)
UniBasel Contributors:Martin, Ivan
Item Type:Article, refereed
Article Subtype:Research Article
Publisher:Elsevier
ISSN:0142-9612
Note:Publication type according to Uni Basel Research Database: Journal article
Language:English
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Last Modified:28 Sep 2017 07:05
Deposited On:22 Mar 2012 13:39

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