Open Access Article
Siwei
Li†
a,
Peter
Glynne-Jones†
b,
Orestis G.
Andriotis
c,
Kuan Y.
Ching
d,
Umesh S.
Jonnalagadda
b,
Richard O. C.
Oreffo
a,
Martyn
Hill
b and
Rahul S.
Tare
*ab
aCentre for Human Development, Stem Cells and Regeneration, Faculty of Medicine, University of Southampton, Southampton SO16 6YD, UK. E-mail: rt2@soton.ac.uk; Fax: +44 2381 204221; Tel: +44 (0)2381 205257
bEngineering Sciences, Faculty of Engineering and the Environment, University of Southampton, Southampton SO17 1BJ, UK
cInstitute of Lightweight Design and Structural Biomechanics, Vienna University of Technology, Gusshausstrasse 27-29 A-1040, Vienna, Austria
dnCATS, Faculty of Engineering and the Environment, University of Southampton, Southampton SO17 1BJ, UK
First published on 24th September 2014
Cartilage grafts generated using conventional static tissue engineering strategies are characterised by low cell viability, suboptimal hyaline cartilage formation and, critically, inferior mechanical competency, which limit their application for resurfacing articular cartilage defects. To address the limitations of conventional static cartilage bioengineering strategies and generate robust, scaffold-free neocartilage grafts of human articular chondrocytes, the present study utilised custom-built microfluidic perfusion bioreactors with integrated ultrasound standing wave traps. The system employed sweeping acoustic drive frequencies over the range of 890 to 910 kHz and continuous perfusion of the chondrogenic culture medium at a low-shear flow rate to promote the generation of three-dimensional agglomerates of human articular chondrocytes, and enhance cartilage formation by cells of the agglomerates via improved mechanical stimulation and mass transfer rates. Histological examination and assessment of micromechanical properties using indentation-type atomic force microscopy confirmed that the neocartilage grafts were analogous to native hyaline cartilage. Furthermore, in the ex vivo organ culture partial thickness cartilage defect model, implantation of the neocartilage grafts into defects for 16 weeks resulted in the formation of hyaline cartilage-like repair tissue that adhered to the host cartilage and contributed to significant improvements to the tissue architecture within the defects, compared to the empty defects. The study has demonstrated the first successful application of the acoustofluidic perfusion bioreactors to bioengineer scaffold-free neocartilage grafts of human articular chondrocytes that have the potential for subsequent use in second generation autologous chondrocyte implantation procedures for the repair of partial thickness cartilage defects.
Surgical interventions for functional restoration of articular cartilage defects include reparative bone marrow stimulation techniques such as abrasion arthroplasty, drilling, microfracture, and restorative approaches such as autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI), osteochondral auto/allografts, periosteal/perichondral grafts.2 Although these interventions provide symptomatic relief and improve joint function temporarily, to date, no technique has been completely successful in restoring/regenerating damaged articular cartilage to its native state. This is because the repair tissue that is generated is often fibrocartilaginous in nature, and therefore lacks the mechanical competency of hyaline articular cartilage. Moreover, inability of the implanted graft/fibrocartilaginous repair tissue to integrate with the surrounding native cartilage contributes to graft failure and further degeneration of the joint.
Attempts to improve the outcomes of cell-based transplantation methods, such as ACI, have therefore focused on the application of autologous chondrocytes seeded onto collagen scaffolds, in matrix-induced ACI, and three-dimensional (3-D) cartilaginous constructs, in second (II) generation ACI, for the repair of articular cartilage defects.3–5 This, in turn, has led to considerable interest in the development of effective scaffold-free and scaffold-based tissue engineering strategies for generating cartilage grafts. Scaffold-free modalities have been employed to stimulate chondrogenic differentiation and cartilage formation via cell–cell and cell–matrix interactions in high-density chondrospheres and multilayer articular chondrocyte sheets.6,7 In contrast to the scaffold-free modalities, which require cells to develop their own structure and matrix during development, strategies harnessing scaffolds provide cells with an effective 3-D framework that supports tissue assembly and growth. However, the successful application of biomaterials in tissue engineering, including cartilage bioengineering, requires careful consideration of their 3-D architecture, biofunctionality, biocompatibility, biomechanics, degradation rates and immunogenicity of the degradation products.8,9
Tissue grafts generated using conventional static tissue engineering strategies are often characterised by appreciable necrosis and suboptimal tissue formation due to poor nutrient mass transfer rates and oxygen diffusion in almost any graft site with diffusion distance more than 1 mm.10 To address some of the issues related to suboptimal tissue formation and cell viability in constructs generated using 3-D static culture techniques, tissue engineering strategies have increasingly applied bioreactors, which provide a closely monitored environment and, critically, biomechanical stimuli such as hydrodynamic shear stress, hydrostatic pressure and dynamic compression for optimal tissue growth.11 Bioreactors have been used to culture a wide range of cells, namely stem cells, chondrocytes, osteoblasts, keratinocytes, hepatocytes, cardiomyocytes and myofibroblasts, for a diverse array of applications including cartilage, bone, skin, liver and cardiovascular tissue engineering.11,12 In particular, perfusion flow bioreactors have been frequently used for cartilage tissue engineering due to their ability to enhance cartilage formation by chondrocytes and mesenchymal cell populations through the application of mechanical stimuli in the form of fluid flow-induced hydrodynamic shear stresses, and improvement of mass transfer rates of metabolites and oxygen.13,14
The safe use of ultrasound and its diverse diagnostic and therapeutic applications are widely acknowledged.15–17 Low intensity pulsed ultrasound has been demonstrated to accelerate the repair of damaged cartilage in a number of animal studies. Low intensity ultrasound typically refers to field intensities below 1 W cm−2 that are applied either in continuous or burst (pulsed) mode.18,19 A variation of low intensity ultrasound, referred to as low intensity diffuse ultrasound, involves scattering of acoustic waves generated by the transducer throughout the chamber.20 In the rat model of papain-induced knee osteoarthritis, the application of ultrasound was shown to enhance cartilage repair in the early stage of the disease, and arrest further deteriorative cartilage damage in the later stage of osteoarthritis.21 Daily low intensity pulsed ultrasound was demonstrated to have a significant positive effect on the repair of full thickness osteochondral defects created in the patellar grooves of rabbits.22 In a canine model, low intensity pulsed ultrasound enhanced the incorporation of autologous osteochondral plugs by improving the characteristics of the interface repair tissue and its integration with the adjacent cartilage.23
In the field of tissue engineering, ultrasound has predominantly been applied in the form of low intensity ultrasound to stimulate cells, and ultrasonic standing wave fields to generate acoustic traps, which can spatially manipulate cells, proteins and microbeads.24 Specifically for cartilage tissue engineering, the application of low intensity ultrasound to enhance chondrogenic differentiation of bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells and chondrocytes, cultured in a variety of 3-D environments, has been documented in a number of studies.25–29 However, ultrasonic cell trapping, a non-destructive and non-invasive cell manipulation technique,30 is a relatively less exploited application of ultrasound for cartilage tissue engineering. When a fluid containing a suspension of cells is exposed to an ultrasonic standing wave field in a chamber/trap, the acoustic radiation force arising from the scattering of the acoustic waves on the cells directs the motion (i.e. acoustophoresis) of cells typically to areas of minimum pressure, referred to as pressure nodes, and facilitates their aggregation into multicellular clusters.31–33 Furthermore, it is possible to drive ensembles of cells into geometric formations, including linear clusters and planar (2-D) sheets, by appropriately shaping the resonant wave field within the ultrasonic trap, and also levitate the multicellular aggregates away from the influence of the solid substrate.34,35
The present study applied a novel approach that combined bioreactor technology with ultrasonic cell trapping to bioengineer 3-D, scaffold-free neocartilage grafts of human articular chondrocytes in custom-built microfluidic perfusion bioreactors with integrated ultrasound standing wave traps (USWT). The neocartilage grafts were then examined for their potential to repair partial thickness chondral defects. The study has demonstrated the first successful application of the acoustofluidic perfusion bioreactor for bioengineering scaffold-free, hyaline cartilage-like explants of human articular chondrocytes. Following implantation into partial thickness chondral defects, the bioengineered explants generated hyaline cartilage-like repair tissue that integrated closely with the surrounding host articular cartilage and contributed to significant improvements to the tissue architecture within the defects. The neocartilage grafts, therefore, have the potential for application in restorative surgical procedures, such as II generation ACI, to repair early-stage articular cartilage damage and limit further cartilage degeneration.
The transducer generated an ultrasonic standing wave field in the lumen of the capillary, with the upper glass surface acting as a reflector. An impedance spectrum was used in conjunction with a transfer impedance model to predict the resonant frequencies of the system.40,41 The half-wavelength resonance of the cavity was found at 897, 899 and 902 kHz for the three devices respectively. The half-wavelength resonance had a pressure node in the centre of the chamber and was observed to i) promote the formation of a 3-D multicellular agglomerate by rapid aggregation at the pressure node of HACs introduced into the chamber, and ii) levitate the agglomerate in the lumen of the chamber above the transducer away from the influence of the solid substrate (Fig. 1b). The voltage drop method was used to assess the acoustic pressure amplitude;31 a range of locations over the transducer were examined with average acoustic pressure amplitude of 17 ± 5.1 kPa V−1. The generator was adjusted to create a voltage of 10 Vpp (peak-to-peak voltage) across the transducer (average over sweep range). In addition to the primary potential energy gradients found perpendicular to the transducer, smaller forces caused by gradients in the kinetic energy density parallel to the transducer created localised trapping forces.42 These forces assisted agglomerate formation (aided by the secondary inter-particle forces) and also held the agglomerate against the perfusion flow. It was found that a typical agglomerate of HACs could withstand linear fluid velocities of up to approximately 1 mm s−1, thus trapping the levitated agglomerate against the flow of continuous perfusion.
Serum free chondrogenic culture medium held within a reservoir was circulated around a closed loop by a peristaltic pump (403U/VM2, Watson-Marlow, Falmouth, UK) and Marprene tubing (505DZ/RL, Fisher Scientific, UK; ID 0.8 mm) at a rate of 1.32 ml h−1 (Fig. 1c). The serum-free chondrogenic medium was composed of α-MEM supplemented with 10 ng ml−1 rhTGF-β3 (PeproTech, London, UK), 100 μM ascorbate-2-phosphate, 10 nM dexamethasone and 1X ITS liquid supplement (10 μg ml−1 insulin, 5.5 μg ml−1 transferrin and 5 ng ml−1 selenite premix). The loop included the resonant chamber connected to the tubing via PDMS connectors and a bubble trap in close proximity to the chamber to prevent bubbles disrupting the levitated agglomerate. A syringe pump enabled excess bubbles to be extracted from the bubble trap; during the experiment this was run at a continuous rate of 0.02 ml h−1. The optimum CO2 concentration was maintained by preconditioning the chondrogenic medium in a standard CO2 incubator for 24 h to allow gaseous equilibrium and creating a 5% CO2 atmosphere in the space above the culture medium in the reservoir through introduction of the gas via a HEPA filter with 0.22 μm pore size.
Another syringe pump was used to introduce cells into the chamber via a dedicated inlet. A suspension of HACs containing 1 × 106 cells was introduced at a rate of 1 ml min−1 with the ultrasound active. The perfusion peristaltic pump was activated once stable agglomerates were formed. The system was placed within a poly(methyl methacrylate)/PMMA box covered with expanded polystyrene sheets for thermal insulation and a custom heating controller circulated hot air to maintain the ambient temperature at 36 °C. Although activation of the ultrasound was found to cause heating, at the ambient temperature, the active region of the chamber reached a steady 37.0 ± 0.5 °C. The multicellular agglomerates were cultured within the acoustofluidic perfusion bioreactors over a period of 21 days in serum-free chondrogenic medium to promote cartilage formation. At the end of the culture period, two grafts were labelled with Cell Tracker™ Green and Ethidium homodimer-1, fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA) overnight at 4 °C and used for histological analysis; three grafts were used for determination of biomechanical properties and two grafts were harvested for implantation into partial thickness chondral defects.
:
150 following the antigen retrieval procedure, which involved heating sections in 0.01 M citrate buffer (pH 6.0) for 5 minutes before the application of the standard immunohistochemistry procedure. Sections were treated with type I hyaluronidase at 37 °C for 20 min in order to unmask the collagen fibres and render them accessible for immunostaining with the antibodies against the three types of collagen. The anti-collagen type I antibody (LF68 from Dr Larry Fisher, NIH, USA), anti-collagen type II and anti-collagen type X antibodies (cat. no. 234187 and 234196, both sourced from Millipore, Watford, UK) were used at dilutions of 1
:
1000, 1
:
500 and 1
:
100, respectively.
The micromechanical properties of the neocartilage constructs were compared with full thickness human articular cartilage. The values for microscale elastic moduli of the neocartilage constructs and full thickness human articular cartilage samples determined by IT-AFM were found to be comparable (Fig. 3).
The scaffold-free grafts bioengineered in the acoustofluidic perfusion bioreactors using 1 × 106 HACs exhibited distinct hyaline cartilage-like tissue, which was characterised by the robust expression of chondrogenic markers, namely SOX-9, type II collagen and proteoglycans, coupled with negligible expression of collagen types I and X. Previous studies have demonstrated induction of type II collagen and proteoglycans by human articular chondrocytes in 3-D alginate culture in response to low intensity ultrasound, and suppression of chondrocyte hypertrophy by inhibition of expression of type X collagen due to low intensity ultrasound treatment.48,49 Although the exact mechanism by which ultrasound promotes the expression of chondrogenic markers remains to be fully elucidated, it has been suggested that excitation of microbubbles or acoustic streaming produced by the ultrasound can modulate mechanoreceptor-mediated transmembrane signalling mechanisms (involving protein kinase C) for the regulation of Aggrecan gene expression and stimulation of subsequent proteoglycan synthesis.50–52 Moreover, both cell shape and cytoskeletal organisation were shown to be essential for initiation of Sox-9 expression and maintenance of the differentiated chondrocyte phenotype in 2-D aggregates of chick wing bud mesenchymal cells, which were generated and levitated using an USWT.53
To enhance mass transfer and mechanical stimulation, the current system employed two strategies, namely continuous perfusion of the culture medium at rates considered low-shear and sweeping acoustic drive frequencies over the range of 890 to 910 kHz, at a sweep rate of 50 Hz. The sweep rate of 50 Hz reflected the maximum value available from the signal generator that was used in the study. The application of fluid shear from the perfusion system in our device compensated for the reduced acoustically-induced forces exerted on the cells by the ultrasonic waves. Mechanical stimulation conveyed by the flow of the culture medium i.e. fluid flow-induced shear, has been acknowledged as a crucial biomechanical stimulus, which enhances chondrocyte function and ex vivo cartilage formation by directly influencing cell metabolism and extracellular matrix synthesis.13 Moreover, chondrocytes respond positively to fluid convection, which has been shown to promote the transport of molecules and further improve cartilage formation due to enhanced mass transfer rates of metabolites.54
As a significant departure from previous studies that applied either low intensity pulsed ultrasound (1–1.5 MHz, 1 kHz repeat, 6–40 min) or intermittent low intensity diffuse ultrasound (5 MHz excitation frequency) to stimulate chondrocytes,20,29,51 in our study the ultrasound was constantly applied over the 21 day culture period and swept over a small range of frequencies, thereby exciting a range of standing wave resonances in the capillary. Initially, the frequency sweep was applied in order to facilitate multiple devices (that were hand-assembled and hence, exhibited slight differences in resonant frequencies) to be run simultaneously from a single amplifier, and to allow for small changes in the resonant frequency with time due to temperature fluctuations and/or geometric changes of the transducers as a result of autoclaving. The range (890–910 kHz) was chosen so as to include the half-wavelength resonant frequencies of the three devices (897, 899 and 902 kHz). However, an additional effect is observed that warrants further investigation in the future: the frequency sweeping caused the agglomerates to vibrate/oscillate at the sweep frequency of 50 Hz, resulting in the application of additional fluidic shear stresses to the agglomerates. This effect was more easily observed at lower sweep frequencies, at which it was apparent that each individual frequency of the sweep range created a slightly different resonance and related trapping position. At lower sweep frequencies e.g. when the sweep frequency was reduced to 1 Hz, the cell agglomerates were observed to oscillate with ~1 mm vibration amplitude. Based on these preliminary observations, we hypothesise that the mechanical stimulation provided by the vibration applied to the cell agglomerates, in addition to the fluid shear from continuous perfusion of the chondrogenic culture medium, may be crucial for stimulating robust chondrogenesis and hyaline cartilage formation in the agglomerates. Further work is however required to optimise the sweep rate, quantify the mechanical forces acting on the agglomerates and examine their effects in detail on cartilage formation by the cells of the agglomerates.
When ultrasound is absorbed by a material, its mechanical energy is primarily converted into heat. The acoustofluidic perfusion bioreactors in the present study are custom-built using glass capillaries and filled with culture medium, both of which are ‘low-loss materials’. Moreover, the capillary construction limits transmission of the ultrasound into the surrounding structure, thereby resulting in a high resonant Q-factor. Hence, it is possible to generate a substantial acoustic field without significant heating.55 The steady state temperature rise recorded by the thermocouple embedded within our device was 0.8 °C. Additionally, in the current experimental setup, a custom made incubator incorporating a fan and thermostatic control maintained the environmental temperature at around 36 °C, thus ensuring the optimal cell culture temperature close to 37 °C in the active region of the bioreactor. Prolonged exposure to ultrasound in the acoustofluidic perfusion bioreactor therefore did not adversely affect cell viability, as confirmed by the presence of metabolically active viable cells and absence of necrotic cells in day 21 neocartilage explants.
To determine the micromechanical properties of the neocartilage grafts, elastic moduli of the bulk material of day 21 grafts were measured using an IT-AFM microtip (spherical indenter diameter of 10 μm), and compared to the elastic moduli of freshly isolated full-thickness human articular cartilage pieces. Previous work has reported that the microscale elastic modulus of human articular cartilage, determined using IT-AFM, is 1.3 MPa regardless of the degree of OA, while changes due to aging and/or OA are only depicted at the nanometer scale.43 Harnessing a similar IT-AFM setup, we obtained comparable value for elastic modulus [1.34 ± 0.315 MPa] of the full-thickness human articular cartilage pieces utilised in the present study. Interestingly, the elastic modulus [0.90 ± 0.372 MPa] of day 21 neocartilage grafts was similar to the elastic modulus of human articular cartilage. Thus, the neocartilage constructs were not only histologically comparable to hyaline cartilage, but also displayed comparable mechanical competency as native articular cartilage.
An ex vivo organ culture partial thickness cartilage defect model was utilised in the present study to determine the ability of the neocartilage explants to integrate with native human articular cartilage and repair the defects. Integration is defined as the absence of gaps between the surface of the repair tissue generated by the cartilage graft and the border of the native cartilage matrix in the defect region.56 Often after implantation, cartilaginous grafts do not integrate readily or predictably with the host tissue to form a continuous mechanically stable attachment. This largely occurs because the repair tissue is predominantly composed of fibrocartilage, which is deficient in proteoglycans and mechanically inferior, compared to the host hyaline cartilage.57 In the present study, following implantation of the neocartilage graft into the chondral defect and co-culture for 16 weeks ex vivo, the defect was filled with hyaline cartilage-like tissue characterised by the presence of numerous chondrocytes embedded in dense proteoglycan matrix. Although a discernible boundary was visible, no gaps were observed between the edge of the repair tissue and the border of the defect in the host cartilage. This was indicative of continuous close attachment between the newly synthesized hyaline cartilage-like repair tissue and the host articular cartilage, and integration of the repair tissue into the surrounding native cartilage. Thus, implantation of the neocartilage graft into the chondral defect resulted in the generation of hyaline cartilage-like repair tissue that contributed to significant improvements to the tissue architecture within the defect, in comparison to absence of cartilage regeneration in the empty defect. Further investigations will focus on examining the biomechanical properties of the repair tissue.
We acknowledge the limitations of the ex vivo organ culture partial thickness cartilage defect model used in our study to reproduce the complex biological and mechanical environment of the joint. Since constructs demonstrate a certain threshold of function in vitro, to carry out a realistic assessment of their potential for cartilage repair, we recognise that they should be assayed in a large animal (e.g. lapine model) load-bearing environment.9 Future work will therefore involve implantation of the neocartilage grafts in partial thickness chondral defects created in rabbit lateral femoral condyles and long-term assessment of the repair tissue post-implantation.
Footnote |
| † Both authors contributed equally to this work. |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2014 |