Materials Today Bio (Aug 2023)
Construction of 3D-Bioprinted cartilage-mimicking substitute based on photo-crosslinkable Wharton's jelly bioinks for full-thickness articular cartilage defect repair
Abstract
Three-dimensional (3D) bioprinted cartilage-mimicking substitutes for full-thickness articular cartilage defect repair have emerged as alternatives to in situ defect repair models. However, there has been very limited breakthrough in cartilage regeneration based on 3D bioprinting owing to the lack of ideal bioinks with printability, biocompatibility, bioactivity, and suitable physicochemical properties. In contrast to animal-derived natural polymers or acellular matrices, human-derived Wharton's jelly is biocompatible and hypoimmunogenic with an abundant source. Although acellular Wharton's jelly can mimic the chondrogenic microenvironment, it remains challenging to prepare both printable and biologically active bioinks from this material. Here, we firstly prepared methacryloyl-modified acellular Wharton's jelly (AWJMA) using a previously established photo-crosslinking strategy. Subsequently, we combined methacryloyl-modified gelatin with AWJMA to obtain a hybrid hydrogel that exhibited both physicochemical properties and biological activities that were suitable for 3D bioprinting. Moreover, bone marrow mesenchymal stem cell-loaded 3D-bioprinted cartilage-mimicking substitutes had superior advantages for the survival, proliferation, spreading, and chondrogenic differentiation of bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells, which enabled satisfactory repair of a model of full-thickness articular cartilage defect in the rabbit knee joint. The current study provides a novel strategy based on 3D bioprinting of cartilage-mimicking substitutes for full-thickness articular cartilage defect repair.