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Comparison of the efficiency of laminin versus fibronectin as a differential adhesion assay for isolation of human articular cartilage derived chondroprogenitors

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posted on 2020-05-14, 09:55 authored by Elizabeth Vinod, Roshni Parameswaran, Soosai Manickam Amirtham, Abel Livingston, Boopalan Ramasamy, Upasana Kachroo

Purpose: Cartilage repair following trauma or degeneration is poor, making cell-based therapy an important avenue of treatment. Chondrocytes and mesenchymal stem cells have been extensively studied as potential candidates, although tendency toward hypertrophy and formation of mixed hyaline-fibrocartilage necessitates further optimization. Chondroprogenitors, isolated using fibronectin adhesion assay are reported to show reduced hypertrophy and enhanced chondrogenesis. Laminin, an essential component of extracellular matrix, has been shown to positively modulate chondrocyte proliferation, migration, and survival. The aim of our study was to evaluate the effect of laminin as a differential adhesion assay and obtain an enriched population of chondroprogenitors and assess its efficiency when compared to progenitors obtained via fibronectin.

Materials and methods: Chondrocytes were isolated from three osteoarthritic knee joints and subjected to fibronectin and laminin adhesion to obtain chondroprogenitors. After expansion in culture, they were assessed for differences in their biological characteristics based on growth kinetics, surface marker expression, gene expression for assessing markers of chondrogenesis and hypertrophy, and potential for tri-lineage differentiation.

Results: Our results showed that cells isolated by laminin and fibronectin both displayed comparable characteristics except in terms of proliferative potential (higher in laminin), gene expression of COL2A1 (lower in laminin) and trilineage potential where the laminin group showed higher osteogenic and adipogenic differentiation.

Conclusion: This was the first attempt to successfully isolate human articular cartilage derived chondroprogenitor clones using laminin, which retained stem cell like characteristics. Further evaluation to optimize this method will help enhance chondroprogenitor characteristics, for use in cartilage repair.

Funding

This project was funded by Centre for Stem Cell Research Core Grant (A unit of inStem Bengaluru), Christian Medical College, Vellore [Centre for Stem Cell Research Core Grant].

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