npj Regenerative Medicine (Oct 2021)

Safety and efficacy of human juvenile chondrocyte-derived cell sheets for osteochondral defect treatment

  • Makoto Kondo,
  • Sumako Kameishi,
  • Kyungsook Kim,
  • Nicolas F. Metzler,
  • Travis G. Maak,
  • Douglas T. Hutchinson,
  • Angela A. Wang,
  • Miki Maehara,
  • Masato Sato,
  • David W. Grainger,
  • Teruo Okano

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41536-021-00173-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Knee cartilage does not regenerate spontaneously after injury, and a gold standard regenerative treatment algorithm has not been established. This study demonstrates preclinical safety and efficacy of scaffold-free, human juvenile cartilage-derived-chondrocyte (JCC) sheets produced from routine surgical discards using thermo-responsive cultureware. JCCs exhibit stable and high growth potential in vitro over passage 10, supporting possibilities for scale-up to mass production for commercialization. JCC sheets contain highly viable, densely packed cells, show no anchorage-independent cell growth, express mesenchymal surface markers, and lack MHC II expression. In nude rat focal osteochondral defect models, stable neocartilage formation was observed at 4 weeks by JCC sheet transplantation without abnormal tissue growth over 24 weeks in contrast to the nontreatment group showing no spontaneous cartilage repair. Regenerated cartilage was safranin-O positive, contained type II collagen, aggrecan, and human vimentin, and lacked type I collagen, indicating that the hyaline-like neocartilage formed originates from transplanted JCC sheets rather than host-derived cells. This study demonstrates the safety of JCC sheets and stable hyaline cartilage formation with engineered JCC sheets utilizing a sustainable tissue supply. Cost-benefit and scaling issues for sheet fabrication and use support feasibility of this JCC sheet strategy in clinical cartilage repair.