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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 65 - 65
1 Mar 2021
Sallent I Zeugolis D
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Adherent cells are known to respond to physical characteristics of their surrounding microenvironment, adapting their cytoskeleton and initiating signaling cascades specific to the type of cue encountered. Scaffolds mimicking native biophysical cues have proven to differentiate stem cells towards tissue-specific lineages and to maintain the phenotype of somatic cells for longer periods of time in culture. Biomaterial-based tendon implants are designed to withstand high physiological loads but often lack the appropriate biochemical, biophysical and biological structure to drive tendon regeneration by populating cells. The objective of this study is to use tendon main component, collagen type I, to create scaffolds that reproduce tendon natural anisotropy and rigidity, in an effort to engineer functional tendon tissue with native organization and strength, able to maintain tenocyte phenotype and to differentiate stem cells towards the tenogenic lineage. Porcine collagen type I in solution was treated with one of the following cross-linkers: glutaraldehyde, genipin or 4-arm polyethylene glycol (4SP). The resulting mixture was poured on micro-grooved (2×2×2 um) or planar PDMS moulds and air-dried to obtain 5 mg/ml collagen films. Surface topography and elastic modulus were analyzed using SEM/AFM and rheometry, respectively. Human tendon cells were cultured on the micro-grooved/planar scaffolds for up to 10 days. Cell morphology, collagen III and tenascin C expression were analyzed by immunocytochemistry. Among the different cross-linkers used, only the treatment with 4SP resulted in scaffolds with a recognizable micro-grooved surface topography. Precise control over the micro-grooved topography and the rigidity of the scaffolds was achieved by cross-linking the collagen with varying concentrations of 4SP (0, 0.5, 1 and 1.5mM) at low pH and temperature. The elastic modulus of the scaffolds cross-linked with 4SP (0.5mM) matched the values previously reported to induce tenogenic differentiation in stem cells (50–90 kPa). Approximately eighty percent of the human tendon cells cultured on the micro-grooved collagen films aligned in the direction of the anisotropy for 10 days in culture, mimicking the alignment of tenocytes in the native tissue. Cell nuclei morphology, known to play a central role in the process of mechanotransduction, was significantly more elongated for the tenocytes cultured on the micro-grooved scaffolds after 4 days in culture for all the 4SP concentrations. Synthesis, deposition and alignment of collagen III and tenascin C, two important tenogenic markers, were up regulated selectively on the micro-grooved and rigid scaffolds after 10 days in culture, respectively. These results highlight the synergistic effect of matrix rigidity and cell alignment on tenogenic cell lineage commitment. Collectively, this study provides new insights into how collagen can be modulated to create scaffolds with precise imprinted topographies and controlled rigidities.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 56 - 56
1 Jul 2020
Tsiapalis D De Pieri A Sallent I Galway N Zeugolis D Galway N Korntner S
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Cellular therapies play an important role in tendon tissue engineering with tenocytes being described as the most prominent cell population if available in large numbers. However, in vitro expansion of tenocytes in standard culture leads to phenotypic drift and cellular senescence. Recent work suggests that maintenance of tenogenic phenotype in vitro can be achieved by recapitulating different aspects of the native tendon microenvironment. One approach used to modulate the in vitro microenvironment and enhance extracellular matrix (ECM) deposition is macromolecular crowding (MMC). MMC is based on the addition of inert macromolecules to the culture media mimicking the dense extracellular matrix. In addition, as tendon has been described to be a relatively avascular and hypoxic tissue and low oxygen tension can stimulate collagen synthesis and cross-linking, we venture to assess the synergistic effect of MMC and low oxygen tension on human tenocyte phenotype maintenance by enhancing synthesis and deposition of tissue-specific ECM.

Human tendons were kindly provided from University Hospital Galway, after obtaining appropriate licenses, ethical approvals and patient consent. Afterwards, tenocytes were extracted using the migration method. Experiments were conducted at passage three. Optimization of MMC conditions was assessed using 50 to 500 μg/ml carrageenan (Sigma Aldrich, UK). For variable oxygen tension cultures, tenocytes were incubated in a Coy Lab (USA) hypoxia chamber. ECM synthesis and deposition were assessed using SDS-PAGE (BioRad, UK) and immunocytochemistry (ABCAM, UK) analysis. Protein analysis for Scleraxis (ABCAM, UK) was performed using western blot. Gene analysis was conducted using a gene array (Roche, Ireland). Cell morphology was assessed using bright-field microscopy. All experiments were performed at least in triplicate. MINITAB (version 16, Minitab, Inc.) was used for statistical analysis. Two-sample t-test for pairwise comparisons and ANOVA for multiple comparisons were conducted

SDS-PAGE and immunocytochemistry analysis demonstrated that human tenocytes treated with the optimal MMC concentration at 2% oxygen tension showed increased synthesis and deposition of collagen type I, the major component of tendon ECM. Moreover, immunocytochemistry for the tendon-specific ECM proteins collagen type III, V, VI and fibronectin illustrated enhanced deposition when cells were treated with MMC at 2% oxygen tension. In addition, protein analysis revealed elevated dexpression of the tendon-specific protein Sclearaxis, while a detailed gene analysis revealed upregulation of tendon-related genes and downregulation of trans-differentiation markers again when cells cultured with MMC at 2% oxygen tension. Finally, low oxygen tension and MMC did not affect the metabolic activity, proliferation and viability of human tenocytes.

Collectively, results suggest that the synergistic effect of MMC and low oxygen tension can accelerate the formation of ECM-rich substitutes, which stimulates tenogenic phenotype maintenance. Currently, the addition of substrate aligned topography together with MMC and hypoxia is being investigated in this multifactorial study for the development of an implantable device for tendon regeneration.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 88 - 88
1 Jul 2020
Sallent I Zeugolis D
Full Access

Adherent cells are known to respond to physical characteristics of their surrounding microenvironment, adapting their cytoskeleton and initiating signaling cascades specific to the type of cue encountered. Scaffolds mimicking native biophysical cues have proven to differentiate stem cells towards tissue-specific lineages and to maintain the phenotype of somatic cells for longer periods of culture time. Although the characteristic anisotropy of tendon tissue is commonly replicated in scaffolds, relevant physical cues such as tendon rigidity or mechanical loading are often neglected. The objective of this study is to use tendons' main extracellular matrix component, collagen type I, to create scaffolds with an anisotropic surface topography and controlled rigidity, in an effort to engineer functional tendon tissue equivalents, with native organization and strength.

Porcine collagen type I in solution was treated with one of the following cross-linkers: glutaraldehyde, genipin or 4-arm polyethylene glycol (4SP). The resulting mixture was poured on micro-grooved (2×2×2 μm) or planar polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) molds and dried in a laminar flow hood to obtain 5 mg/ml collagen films. Surface topography and elastic modulus of the final scaffolds were analyzed using SEM/AFM and rheometry, respectively. Human tendon cells were isolated from adult tendon tissue and cultured on micro-grooved/planar scaffolds for 4, 7 and 10 days. Cell morphology, collagen III and tenascin C expression were analyzed by immunocytochemistry.

Among the different cross-linkers used, only the treatment with 4SP resulted in scaffolds with a recognizable micro-grooved surface topography. Precise control over the micro-grooved topography and the rigidity of the scaffolds was achieved by cross-linking the collagen with varying concentrations of 4SP at low pH and temperature. The elastic modulus of the scaffolds cross-linked with the highest concentration of 4SP matched the physiological values reported in developing tendons (∼15 kPa). Around eighty percent of the human tendon cells cultured on the cross-linked collagen films aligned in the direction of the anisotropy for 10 days in culture. At 4 days, tenoyctes cultured on micro-grooved substrates presented a significant higher nuclei aspect ratio than tenocytes cultured on planar substrates for all the 4SP concentrations. Synthesis, deposition and alignment of collagen III and tenascin C, two important tenogenic markers, were up regulated selectively in the rigid micro-grooved scaffolds after 7 days in culture. These results highlight the synergistic effect of matrix rigidity and cell alignment on tenogenic cell lineage commitment.

Collectively, this study provides new insights into how collagen can be modulated to create scaffolds with precise imprinted topographies and controlled rigidities. Gene expression analysis and a replicate study with hBMSCs will be carried out to support the first results and to further identify the optimal biophysical conditions for tenogenic cell lineage commitment. This potentially leads to the design of smart implants that not only restore immediate tendon functionality but also provide microscopic cues that drive cellular synthesis of organized tissue-specific matrix.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 129 - 129
1 Nov 2018
Sallent I Zeugolis D
Full Access

Collagen scaffolds are generally characterized by their random fibre distribution and weak mechanical properties, which makes them unsuitable as substitutes for highly anisotropic tissues such as cornea or tendon. Recently, we developed a technique to create collagen type I scaffolds with well-defined anisotropic micro-patterns. Porcine collagen was mixed with PBS10X, NaOH and one of the following cross-linkers: glutaraldehyde (GTA), genipin and 4-arm polyethylene glycol (4SP). The resulting mixture was casted on micro-grooved (2×2×2 μm) polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) moulds and allowed to dry in a laminar flow hood to obtain 5mg/ml collagen films. Different pH, temperatures (Tº), and cross-linker concentrations were tested in the process. Collagen gelation kinetics was analysed with rheometry and surface topography was assessed with scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Human bone marrow stem cells (HBMSCs) were seeded on the films and cell alignment was analysed by rhodamine/phalloidin staining and imaged with fluorescence microscopy. From all three cross-linkers tested, only 4SP cross-linked scaffolds showed a well-defined micro-grooved pattern. Increasing pH and Tº on 4SP-treated collagen decreased gelation time, which resulted in complete inhibition of the pattern, suggesting that an initial low viscous solution is required for a correct PDMS pattern infiltration. A wide range of 4SP concentrations (0.5, 1, 1.5 mM) maintained the well-defined topography on the films, opening the door to future fine-tuning of the stiffness sensed by cells. hBMSCs seeded on top of the scaffolds aligned along the pattern for 14 days in culture. Collectively, this data highlights the potential of these collagen scaffolds as tendon substitutes.