Cells (Mar 2021)

Effect of Muscle Cell Preservation on Viability and Differentiation of Hamstring Tendon Graft In Vitro

  • Jin Kyu Lee,
  • Sungsin Jo,
  • Young Lim Lee,
  • Subin Weon,
  • Jun-Seob Song,
  • Il-Hoon Sung,
  • Tae-Hwan Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells10040740
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 4
p. 740

Abstract

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Muscle tissue is often removed during hamstring tendon graft preparation for anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction. The purpose of the study was to test whether preservation of muscle remnants on a tendon graft is beneficial to the graft healing process following ACL reconstruction. Co-culturing of tendon-derived cells (TDCs) and muscle-derived cells (MDCs) was performed at various ratios, and their potential for cell viability and multilineage differentiation was compared to a single TDC cell group. Ligamentous and chondrogenic differentiation was most enhanced when a small population of MDCs was co-cultured with TDCs (6:2 co-culture group). Cell viability and osteogenic differentiation were proportionally enhanced with increasing MDC population size. MDCs co-cultured with TDCs possess both the ability to enhance cell viability and differentiate into other cell lineages.

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