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Culture of equine fibroblast-like synoviocytes on synthetic tissue scaffolds towards meniscal tissue engineering: a preliminary cell-seeding study

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Title Culture of equine fibroblast-like synoviocytes on synthetic tissue scaffolds towards meniscal tissue engineering: a preliminary cell-seeding study
Names Warnock, Jennifer J. (creator)
Fox, Derek B. (creator)
Stoker, Aaron M. (creator)
Beatty, Mark (creator)
Cockrell, Mary (creator)
Janicek, John C. (creator)
Cook, James L. (creator)
Date Issued 2014-04-17 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the author(s) and published by PeerJ. The published article can be found at: https://peerj.com/.
Abstract INTRODUCTION: Tissue engineering is a new methodology for addressing meniscal
injury or loss. Synovium may be an ideal source of cells for in vitro meniscal fibrocartilage
formation, however, favorable in vitro culture conditions for synovium must be
established in order to achieve this goal. The objective of this study was to determine
cellularity, cell distribution, and extracellular matrix (ECM) formation of equine
fibroblast-like synoviocytes (FLS) cultured on synthetic scaffolds, for potential application
in synovium-based meniscal tissue engineering. Scaffolds included open-cell
poly-L-lactic acid (OPLA) sponges and polyglycolic acid (PGA) scaffolds cultured
in static and dynamic culture conditions, and PGA scaffolds coated in poly-L-lactic
(PLLA) in dynamic culture conditions.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Equine FLS were seeded on OPLA and PGA scaffolds, and
cultured in a static environment or in a rotating bioreactor for 12 days. Equine FLS
were also seeded on PGA scaffolds coated in 2% or 4% PLLA and cultured in a
rotating bioreactor for 14 and 21 days. Three scaffolds from each group were fixed,
sectioned and stained with Masson’s Trichrome, Safranin-O, and Hematoxylin and
Eosin, and cell numbers and distribution were analyzed using computer image analysis.
Three PGA and OPLA scaffolds from each culture condition were also analyzed
for extracellular matrix (ECM) production via dimethylmethylene blue (sulfated
glycosaminoglycan) assay and hydroxyproline (collagen) assay. PLLA coated PGA
scaffolds were analyzed using double stranded DNA quantification as a reflection of
cellularity and confocal laser microscopy in a fluorescent cell viability assay.
RESULTS: The highest cellularity occurred in PGA constructs cultured in a rotating
bioreactor, which also had a mean sulfated glycosaminoglycan content of 22.3 μg per
scaffold. PGA constructs cultured in static conditions had the lowest cellularity. Cells
had difficulty adhering to OPLA and the PLLA coating of PGA scaffolds; cellularity
was inversely proportional to the concentration of PLLA used. PLLA coating did not
prevent dissolution of the PGA scaffolds. All cell scaffold types and culture conditions
produced non-uniformcellular distribution. DISCUSSION/CONCLUSION: FLS-seeding of PGA scaffolds cultured in a rotating bioreactor resulted in the most optimal cell and matrix characteristics seen in this study.
Cells grew only in the pores of the OPLA sponge, and could not adhere to the PLLA
coating of PGA scaffold, due to the hydrophobic property of PLA. While PGA culture
in a bioreactor produced measureable GAG, no culture technique produced
visible collagen. For this reason, and due to the dissolution of PGA scaffolds, the
culture conditions and scaffolds described here are not recommended for inducing
fibrochondrogenesis in equine FLS for meniscal tissue engineering.
Genre Article
Access Condition http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/
Topic Bioengineering
Identifier Warnock, J. J., Fox, D. B., Stoker, A. M., Beatty, M., Cockrell, M., Janicek, J. C., & Cook, J. L. (2014). Culture of equine fibroblast-like synoviocytes on synthetic tissue scaffolds towards meniscal tissue engineering: a preliminary cell-seeding study. PeerJ, 2, e353. doi:10.7717/peerj.353

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