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Novel Exogenous Agents for Improving Articular Cartilage Tissue Engineering

This thesis demonstrated the effects of exogenous stimuli on engineered articular cartilage constructs and elucidated mechanisms underlying the responses to these agents. In particular, a series of studies detailed the effects of chondroitinase-ABC (C-ABC), hyaluronic acid (HA), and TGF-β1 on the biochemical and biomechanical properties of self-assembled articular cartilage. Work with C-ABC showed that this catabolic agent can be employed to improve the tensile properties of constructs. When constructs were cultured for 6 weeks, treating with C-ABC at 2 weeks enhanced the tensile stiffness. Furthermore, treating at 2 and 4 weeks synergistically increased tensile properties and allowed compressive stiffness to recover to control levels. Another study showed that combining C-ABC and TGF-β1 synergistically enhanced the biochemical and biomechanical properties of neotissue. Microarray analysis demonstrated that TGF-β1 increased MAPK signaling in self-assembled neocartilage whereas C-ABC had minimal effects on gene expression. SEM analysis showed that C-ABC increased collagen fibril diameter and fibril density, indicating that C-ABC potentially acts via a biophysical mechanism. Constructs treated with C-ABC and TGF-β1 also showed stability and maturation in vivo , exhibiting a tensile stiffness of 3.15±0.47 MPa compared to a pre-implantation stiffness of 1.95±0.62 MPa. To assess the response to HA application, studies were conducted to optimize HA administration and examine its effects in conjunction with TGF-β1. Applying HA increased the compressive stiffness 1-fold and increased GAG content by 35%, with these improvements depending on HA molecular weight, application commencement time, and concentration. Microarray and PCR analyses showed that HA also influenced genetic signaling, up-regulating multiple genes associated with the TGF-β1 pathway. In addition to genetic effects, the enhanced GAG retention due to HA treatment could increase the fixed charge density of the matrix and thereby increase resistance to compressive loading. Additive effects were observed when HA was applied in conjunction with TGF-β1, with the combined treatment increasing compressive stiffness and GAG content by 150% and 65%, respectively. In general, results demonstrated mechanisms underlying C-ABC, HA, and TGF-β1 treatments and showed how these agents can be applied to improve cartilage regeneration efforts.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:RICE/oai:scholarship.rice.edu:1911/70406
Date January 2012
ContributorsAthanasiou, Kyiacos A.
Source SetsRice University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis, Text
Format330 p., application/pdf

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