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Plateletā€rich plasma enhances the integration of bioengineered cartilage with native tissue in anin vitromodel

Authors :
John Theodoropoulos
Corey Sermer
Mark Hurtig
Rita A. Kandel
Jesse Anderson
Source :
Journal of Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine. 12:427-436
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Hindawi Limited, 2017.

Abstract

Current therapies for cartilage repair can be limited by an inability of the repair tissue to integrate with host tissue. Thus there is interest in developing approaches to enhance integration. We have previously shown that platelet-rich plasma (PRP) improves cartilage tissue formation. This raised the question as to whether PRP could promote cartilage integration. Chondrocytes were isolated from cartilage harvested from bovine joints, seeded on a porous bone substitute, and grown in vitro to form an osteochondral-like implant. After 7 days, the biphasic construct was soaked in PRP for 30 minutes prior to implantation into the core of a donut-shaped biphasic explant of native cartilage and bone. Controls were not soaked in PRP. The implant-explant construct was cultured for 2-4 weeks. PRP-soaked bio-engineered implants integrated with host tissue in 73% of samples, whereas controls only integrated in 19% of samples. The integration strength, as determined by a push-out test, was significantly increased in the PRP-soaked implant group (219 ± 35.4 kPa) compared to controls (72.0 ± 28.5 kPa). This correlated with an increase in glycosaminoglycan and collagen accumulation in the region of integration in the PRP-treated implant group, compared to untreated controls. Immunohistochemical studies revealed that the integration zone contained collagen type II and aggrecan. The cells at the zone of integration in the PRP soaked group had a 3.5 fold increase in matrix metalloproteinase-13 gene expression compared to controls. These results suggest that PRP-soaked bio-engineered cartilage implants may be a better approach for cartilage repair due to enhanced integration.

Details

ISSN :
19327005 and 19326254
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ba0986b9685930865cdde2fabdb662b4