Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Effects of growth factors on cell proliferation and matrix synthesis of low‐density, primary bovine chondrocytes cultured in collagen I gels

71

Citations

36

References

2002

Year

Abstract

Low cell density cell numbers and dedifferentiation are two major problems of human chondrocyte culture associated with articular cartilage repair. Bovine chondrocytes seeded at low density (3.5 x 10(4) cells/ml of gels) in three-dimensional collagen type I gels do proliferate and maintain their phenotype as shown by cell counts, morphology and matrix synthesis. The combination of three growth factors (3GFs; 10 ng/ml TGF-beta1 + 100 ng/ml IGF-I + 10 ng/ml b-FGF) added to serum-free culture medium in this culture system enhances the mitotic activity of bovine chondrocytes similar to 20% foetal calf serum (FCS). At day 21, cells proliferated by 41 fold in gels-FCS and 37 fold in gels-3GFs. Protein synthesis by gels-3GFs cultures was similar to 20% FCS when cultured for 3 weeks but much less proteoglycan was synthesized. The matrix deposition as observed by light and electron microscopy was quite different. More small diameter branching collagen fibrils and a denser matrix were presented in gels-FCS culture whilst loosely arranged larger diameter collagen fibrils were observed in gels-3GFs.

References

YearCitations

Page 1