Issue 10, 2023

Optimization of 3D autologous chondrocyte-seeded polyglycolic acid scaffolds to mimic human ear cartilage

Abstract

Auricular reconstruction in children with microtia is one of the more complex procedures in plastic surgery. Obtaining sufficient native material to build an ear requires harvesting large fragments of rib cartilage in children. Herein, we investigated how to optimize autologous chondrocyte isolation, expansion and re-implantation using polyglycolic acid (PGA) scaffolds for generating enough cartilage to recapitulate a whole ear starting from a small ear biopsy. Ear chondrocytes isolated from human microtia subjects grew slower than microtia rib or healthy ear chondrocytes and displayed a phenotypic shift due to the passage number. Rabbit ear chondrocytes co-cultured with mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) at a 50 : 50 ratio recapitulated the cartilage biological properties in vitro. However, PGA scaffolds with different proportions of rabbit chondrocytes and MSC did not grow substantially in two months when subcutaneously implanted in immunosuppressed mice. In contrast, rabbit chondrocyte-seeded PGA scaffolds implanted in immunocompetent rabbits formed a cartilage 10 times larger than the original PGA scaffold. This cartilage mimicked the biofunctional and mechanical properties of an ear cartilage. These results indicate that autologous chondrocyte-seeded PGA scaffolds fabricated following our optimized procedure have immense potential as a solution for obtaining enough cartilage for auricular reconstruction and opens new avenues to redefine autologous cartilage replacement.

Graphical abstract: Optimization of 3D autologous chondrocyte-seeded polyglycolic acid scaffolds to mimic human ear cartilage

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
09 Jan 2023
Accepted
13 Mar 2023
First published
06 Apr 2023
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Biomater. Sci., 2023,11, 3695-3708

Optimization of 3D autologous chondrocyte-seeded polyglycolic acid scaffolds to mimic human ear cartilage

P. Melgar-Lesmes, O. Bosch, R. Zubajlo, G. Molins, S. Comfort, A. Luque-Saavedra, M. López-Moya, F. García-Polite, F. J. Parri Ferrandis, C. Rogers, A. Gelabertó, J. Martorell, E. R. Edelman and M. Balcells, Biomater. Sci., 2023, 11, 3695 DOI: 10.1039/D3BM00035D

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