Litcius/Paper detail

Vitrification of particulated articular cartilage via calculated protocols

Kezhou Wu, Nadia Shardt, Leila Laouar, Janet A.W. Elliott, Nadr M. Jomha

2021npj Regenerative Medicine26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Preserving viable articular cartilage is a promising approach to address the shortage of graft tissue and enable the clinical repair of articular cartilage defects in articulating joints, such as the knee, ankle, and hip. In this study, we developed two 2-step, dual-temperature, multicryoprotectant loading protocols to cryopreserve particulated articular cartilage (cubes ~1 mm 3 in size) using a mathematical approach, and we experimentally measured chondrocyte viability, metabolic activity, cell migration, and matrix productivity after implementing the designed loading protocols, vitrification, and warming. We demonstrated that porcine and human articular cartilage cubes can be successfully vitrified and rewarmed, maintaining high cell viability and excellent cellular function. The vitrified particulated articular cartilage was stored for a period of 6 months with no significant deterioration in chondrocyte viability and functionality. Our approach enables high-quality long-term storage of viable articular cartilage that can alleviate the shortage of grafts for use in clinically repairing articular cartilage defects.

Topics & Concepts

CartilageChondrocyteEconomic shortageArticular cartilageViability assayAnkleVitrificationCryopreservationMaterials scienceOsteoarthritisBiomedical engineeringMedicineSurgeryAndrologyAnatomyCellChemistryBiologyCell biologyPathologyEmbryoAlternative medicinePhilosophyLinguisticsGovernment (linguistics)BiochemistryOsteoarthritis Treatment and MechanismsKnee injuries and reconstruction techniquesExtracellular vesicles in disease
Vitrification of particulated articular cartilage via calculated protocols | Litcius