Advanced Science (Sep 2023)

Hyperplastic Human Macromass Cartilage for Joint Regeneration

  • Ya Wen,
  • Yishan Chen,
  • Weiliang Wu,
  • Hong Zhang,
  • Zhi Peng,
  • Xudong Yao,
  • Xianzhu Zhang,
  • Wei Jiang,
  • Youguo Liao,
  • Yuan Xie,
  • Xilin Shen,
  • Heng Sun,
  • Jiajie Hu,
  • Hua Liu,
  • Xiao Chen,
  • Jiansong Chen,
  • Hongwei Ouyang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202301833
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 26
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Cartilage damage affects millions of people worldwide. Tissue engineering strategies hold the promise to provide off‐the‐shelf cartilage analogs for tissue transplantation in cartilage repair. However, current strategies hardly generate sufficient grafts, as tissues cannot maintain size growth and cartilaginous phenotypes simultaneously. Herein, a step‐wise strategy is developed for fabricating expandable human macromass cartilage (macro‐cartilage) in a 3D condition by employing human polydactyly chondrocytes and a screen‐defined serum‐free customized culture (CC). CC‐induced chondrocytes demonstrate improved cell plasticity, expressing chondrogenic biomarkers after a 14.59‐times expansion. Crucially, CC‐chondrocytes form large‐size cartilage tissues with average diameters of 3.25 ± 0.05 mm, exhibiting abundant homogenous matrix and intact structure without a necrotic core. Compared with typical culture, the cell yield in CC increases 2.57 times, and the expression of cartilage marker collagen type II increases 4.70 times. Transcriptomics reveal that this step‐wise culture drives a proliferation‐to‐differentiation process through an intermediate plastic stage, and CC‐chondrocytes undergo a chondral lineage‐specific differentiation with an activated metabolism. Animal studies show that CC macro‐cartilage maintains a hyaline‐like cartilage phenotype in vivo and significantly promotes the healing of large cartilage defects. Overall, an efficient expansion of human macro‐cartilage with superior regenerative plasticity is achieved, providing a promising strategy for joint regeneration.

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