Author:
Dufour Alexandre,Lafont Jérôme E.,Buffier Marie,Verset Michaël,Cohendet Angéline,Contamin Hugues,Confais Joachim,Sankar Sharanya,Rioult Marika,Perrier-Groult Emeline,Mallein-Gerin Frédéric
Abstract
AbstractArticular cartilage is built by chondrocytes which become less active with age. This declining function of the chondrocytes, together with the avascular nature of the cartilage, impedes the spontaneous healing of chondral injuries. These lesions can progress to more serious degenerative articular conditions as in the case of osteoarthritis. As no efficient cure for cartilage lesions exist yet, cartilage tissue engineering has emerged as a promising method aiming at repairing joint defects and restoring articular function. In the present work, we investigated if a new self-assembling peptide (referred as IEIK13), combined with articular chondrocytes treated with a chondrogenic cocktail (BMP-2, insulin and T3, designated BIT) could be efficient to restore full-thickness cartilage defects induced in the femoral condyles of a non-human primate model, the cynomolgus monkey. First, in vitro molecular studies indicated that IEIK13 was efficient to support production of cartilage by monkey articular chondrocytes treated with BIT. In vivo, cartilage implant integration was monitored non-invasively by contrast-enhanced micro-computed tomography, and then by post-mortem histological analysis and immunohistochemical staining of the condyles collected 3 months post-implantation. Our results revealed that the full-thickness cartilage injuries treated with either IEIK13 implants loaded with or devoid of chondrocytes showed similar cartilage-characteristic regeneration. This pilot study demonstrates that IEIK13 can be used as a valuable scaffold to support the in vitro activity of articular chondrocytes and the repair of articular cartilage defects, when implanted alone or with chondrocytes.
Funder
Région Rhône-Alpes ARC2
Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
Fondation de l'Avenir pour la Recherche Médicale Appliquée
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
13 articles.
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