Publication | Open Access
Mimicking Cartilage Tissue Zonal Organization by Engineering Tissue-Scale Gradient Hydrogels as 3D Cell Niche
80
Citations
38
References
2017
Year
Tissue EngineeringEngineeringBiomimetic MaterialsBiomaterials DesignBiofabricationBiomedical EngineeringZonal OrganizationRegenerative MedicineHydrogelsStiffness GradientMatrix BiologyMechanobiologyCell NicheCell BiomechanicsFunctional Tissue EngineeringCell EngineeringCell Biology3D BioprintingMesenchymal Stem CellTissue-scale Gradient HydrogelsMedicineHuman TissueStiffness Gradient Hydrogels
Zonal organization plays an important role in cartilage structure and function, whereas most tissue-engineering strategies developed to date have only allowed the regeneration of cartilage with homogeneous biochemical and mechanical cues. To better restore tissue structure and function, there is a strong need to engineer materials with biomimetic gradient niche cues that recapitulate native tissue organization. To address this critical unmet need, in this study, we report a method for rapid formation of tissue-scale gradient hydrogels as a three-dimensional (3D) cell niche with tunable biochemical and physical properties. When encapsulated in stiffness gradient hydrogels, both chondrocytes and mesenchymal stem cells demonstrated zone-specific response and extracellular deposition that mimics zonal organization of articular cartilage. Blocking cell mechanosensing using blebbistatin abolished the zonal response of chondrocytes in 3D hydrogels with a stiffness gradient. Such tissue-scale gradient hydrogels can provide a 3D artificial cell niche to enable tissue engineering of various tissue types with zonal organizations or tissue interfaces.
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