Engineering a Highly Biomimetic Chitosan-Based Cartilage Scaffold by Using Short Fibers and a Cartilage-Decellularized Matrix.
Yanbing ShenYong XuBingcheng YiXianliu WangHan TangChang ChenYanzhong ZhangPublished in: Biomacromolecules (2021)
Engineering scaffolds with structurally and biochemically biomimicking cues is essential for the success of tissue-engineered cartilage. Chitosan (CS)-based scaffolds have been widely used for cartilage regeneration due to its chemostructural similarity to the glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) found in the extracellular matrix of cartilage. However, the weak mechanical properties and inadequate chondroinduction capacity of CS give rise to compromised efficacy of cartilage regeneration. In this study, we incorporated short fiber segments, processed from electrospun aligned poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) fiber arrays, into a citric acid-modified chitosan (CC) hydrogel scaffold for mechanical strengthening and structural biomimicking and meanwhile introduced cartilage-decellularized matrix (CDM) for biochemical signaling to promote the chondroinduction activity. We found that the incorporation of PLGA short fibers and CDM remarkably strengthened the mechanical properties of the CC hydrogel (+349% in compressive strength and +153% in Young's modulus), which also exhibited a large pore size, appropriate porosity, and fast water absorption ability. Biologically, the engineered CDM-Fib/CC scaffold significantly promoted the adhesion and proliferation of chondrocytes and supported the formation of matured cartilage tissue with a cartilagelike structure and deposition of abundant cartilage ECM-specific GAGs and type II collagen (+42% in GAGs content and +295% in type II collagen content). The enhanced mechanical competency and chondroinduction capacity with the engineered CDM-Fib/CC scaffold eventually fulfilled successful in situ osteochondral regeneration in a rabbit model. This study thereby demonstrated a great potential of the engineered highly biomimetic chitosan-based scaffold in cartilage tissue repair and regeneration.