Cartilage tissue engineering: its potential and uses
- 1 January 2006
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Current Opinion in Rheumatology
- Vol. 18 (1), 64-73
- https://doi.org/10.1097/01.bor.0000198005.88568.df
Abstract
The prevalent nature of osteoarthritis, a cartilage degenerative disease that results in the erosion of joint surfaces and loss of mobility, underscores the importance of developing functional articular cartilage replacement. Recent research efforts have focused on tissue engineering as a promising approach for cartilage regeneration and repair. Tissue engineering is a multidisciplinary research area that incorporates both biological and engineering principles for the purpose of generating new, living tissues to replace the diseased/damaged tissue and restore tissue/organ function. This review surveys and highlights the current concepts and recent progress in cartilage tissue engineering, and discusses the challenges and potential of this rapidly advancing field of biomedical research. Cartilage tissue engineering is critically dependent on selection of appropriate cells (differentiated or progenitor cells); fabrication and utilization of biocompatible and mechanically suitable scaffolds for cell delivery; stimulation with chondrogenically bioactive molecules introduced in the form of recombinant proteins or via gene transfer; and application of dynamic, mechanical loading regimens for conditioning of the engineered tissue constructs, including the design of specialized biomechanically active bioreactors. Cell selection, scaffold design and biological stimulation remain the challenges of function tissue engineering. Successful regeneration or replacement of damaged or diseased cartilage will depend on future advances in our understanding of the biology of cartilage and stem cells and technological development in engineering.Keywords
This publication has 90 references indexed in Scilit:
- Comparison of the chondrosarcoma cell line SW1353 with primary human adult articular chondrocytes with regard to their gene expression profile and reactivity to IL-1βOsteoarthritis and Cartilage, 2005
- Mesenchymal stem cell-based cartilage tissue engineering: cells, scaffold and biologyCytotherapy, 2004
- Phenotypic Characterization of Human Chondrocyte Cell Line C-20/A4: A Comparison between Monolayer and Alginate Suspension CultureCells Tissues Organs, 2004
- Molecular phenotyping of HCS-2/8 cells as an in vitro model of human chondrocytesOsteoarthritis and Cartilage, 2004
- Adult mesenchymal stem cells: characterization, differentiation, and application in cell and gene therapyJournal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, 2004
- Chondrogenic differentiation of adipose-derived adult stem cells in agarose, alginate, and gelatin scaffoldsBiomaterials, 2003
- BMP‐2 and BMP‐9 promotes chondrogenic differentiation of human multipotential mesenchymal cells and overcomes the inhibitory effect of IL‐1Journal of Cellular Physiology, 2001
- Chondrocytic differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells sequentially exposed to transforming growth factor‐β1 in monolayer and insulin‐like growth factor‐I in a three‐dimensional matrixJournal of Orthopaedic Research, 2001
- Engineering of Osteochondral Tissue with Bone Marrow Mesenchymal Progenitor Cells in a Derivatized Hyaluronan-Gelatin Composite SpongeTissue Engineering, 1999
- In VitroChondrogenesis of Bone Marrow-Derived Mesenchymal Progenitor CellsExperimental Cell Research, 1998