Selection of highly proliferative and multipotent meniscus progenitors through differential adhesion to fibronectin: A novel approach in meniscus tissue engineering

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Abstract

Meniscus injuries can be highly debilitating and lead to knee osteoarthritis. Progenitor cells from the meniscus could be a superior cell type for meniscus repair and tissue-engineering. The purpose of this study is to characterize meniscus progenitor cells isolated by differential adhesion to fibronectin (FN-prog). Human osteoarthritic menisci were digested, and FN-prog were selected by differential adhesion to fibronectin. Multilineage differentiation, population doubling time, colony formation, and MSC surface markers were assessed in the FN-prog and the total meniscus population (Men). Colony formation was compared between outer and inner zone meniscus digest. Chondrogenic pellet cultures were performed for redifferentiation. FN-prog demonstrated multipotency. The outer zone FN-prog formed more colonies than the inner zone FN-prog. FN-prog displayed more colony formation and a higher proliferation rate than Men. FN-prog redifferentiated in pellet culture and mostly adhered to the MSC surface marker profile, except for HLA-DR receptor expression. This is the first study that demonstrates differential adhesion to fibronectin for the isolation of a progenitor-like population from the meniscus. The high proliferation rates and ability to form meniscus extracellular matrix upon redifferentiation, together with the broad availability of osteoarthritis meniscus tissue, make FN-prog a promising cell type for clinical translation in meniscus tissue-engineering.

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Korpershoek, J. V., Rikkers, M., de Windt, T. S., Tryfonidou, M. A., Saris, D. B. F., & Vonk, L. A. (2021). Selection of highly proliferative and multipotent meniscus progenitors through differential adhesion to fibronectin: A novel approach in meniscus tissue engineering. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 22(16). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22168614

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