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In This Article

  • Summary
  • Abstract
  • Protocol
  • Results
  • Discussion
  • Disclosures
  • Acknowledgements
  • Materials
  • References
  • Reprints and Permissions

Summary

An experimental technique for the treatment of osteochondral defects in the rabbit's knee joint is described. The implantation of allogeneic mesenchymal stem cells into osteochondral defects provides a promising development in the field of tissue engineering. The preparation of fibrin-cell-clots in vitro offers a standardized method for implantation.

Abstract

The treatment of osteochondral articular defects has been challenging physicians for many years. The better understanding of interactions of articular cartilage and subchondral bone in recent years led to increased attention to restoration of the entire osteochondral unit. In comparison to chondral lesions the regeneration of osteochondral defects is much more complex and a far greater surgical and therapeutic challenge. The damaged tissue does not only include the superficial cartilage layer but also the subchondral bone. For deep, osteochondral damage, as it occurs for example with osteochondrosis dissecans, the full thickness of the defect needs to be replaced to restore the joint surface 1. Eligible therapeutic procedures have to consider these two different tissues with their different intrinsic healing potential 2. In the last decades, several surgical treatment options have emerged and have already been clinically established 3-6.

Autologous or allogeneic osteochondral transplants consist of articular cartilage and subchondral bone and allow the replacement of the entire osteochondral unit. The defects are filled with cylindrical osteochondral grafts that aim to provide a congruent hyaline cartilage covered surface 3,7,8. Disadvantages are the limited amount of available grafts, donor site morbidity (for autologous transplants) and the incongruence of the surface; thereby the application of this method is especially limited for large defects.

New approaches in the field of tissue engineering opened up promising possibilities for regenerative osteochondral therapy. The implantation of autologous chondrocytes marked the first cell based biological approach for the treatment of full-thickness cartilage lesions and is now worldwide established with good clinical results even 10 to 20 years after implantation 9,10. However, to date, this technique is not suitable for the treatment of all types of lesions such as deep defects involving the subchondral bone 11.

The sandwich-technique combines bone grafting with current approaches in Tissue Engineering 5,6. This combination seems to be able to overcome the limitations seen in osteochondral grafts alone. After autologous bone grafting to the subchondral defect area, a membrane seeded with autologous chondrocytes is sutured above and facilitates to match the topology of the graft with the injured site. Of course, the previous bone reconstruction needs additional surgical time and often even an additional surgery. Moreover, to date, long-term data is missing 12.

Tissue Engineering without additional bone grafting aims to restore the complex structure and properties of native articular cartilage by chondrogenic and osteogenic potential of the transplanted cells. However, again, it is usually only the cartilage tissue that is more or less regenerated. Additional osteochondral damage needs a specific further treatment. In order to achieve a regeneration of the multilayered structure of osteochondral defects, three-dimensional tissue engineered products seeded with autologous/allogeneic cells might provide a good regeneration capacity 11.

Beside autologous chondrocytes, mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) seem to be an attractive alternative for the development of a full-thickness cartilage tissue. In numerous preclinical in vitro and in vivo studies, mesenchymal stem cells have displayed excellent tissue regeneration potential 13,14. The important advantage of mesenchymal stem cells especially for the treatment of osteochondral defects is that they have the capacity to differentiate in osteocytes as well as chondrocytes. Therefore, they potentially allow a multilayered regeneration of the defect.

In recent years, several scaffolds with osteochondral regenerative potential have therefore been developed and evaluated with promising preliminary results 1,15-18. Furthermore, fibrin glue as a cell carrier became one of the preferred techniques in experimental cartilage repair and has already successfully been used in several animal studies 19-21 and even first human trials 22.

The following protocol will demonstrate an experimental technique for isolating mesenchymal stem cells from a rabbit's bone marrow, for subsequent proliferation in cell culture and for preparing a standardized in vitro-model for fibrin-cell-clots. Finally, a technique for the implantation of pre-established fibrin-cell-clots into artificial osteochondral defects of the rabbit's knee joint will be described.

Protocol

A. Preparation of a Donor Rabbit for the Isolation of Mesenchymal Stem Cells (Surgery Room)

  1. Cells are isolated from male New Zealand White (NZW) rabbits at age of 4 months and approximately 3 kg body weight.
  2. Induce anesthesia by propofol (10 mg/kg body weight i.v.) and sacrifice with sodium pentobarbital (100 mg/kg body weight i.v.).
  3. Shave fur from hind limbs, back and belly with an electric clipper and vacuum the fur.
  4. Disinfect the shaved area thoroughly with 70% ethanol.
  5. Use blunt forceps, sharp scissors (or scalpel) and bone cutters for tissue and ligaments.
  6. Make an incision along the cranial surface of the leg and calf.
  7. Reflect skin and subcutaneous tissue by either sharp or blunt dissection.
  8. Separate muscles and ligaments from tibia and femur. Keep cuts as close to the bone as possible to make a clean dissection. Do not separate femur from tibia at this time.
  9. Cut through the hip joint to separate the head of the femur from the acetabulum.
  10. Elevate the tibial-femoral complex.
  11. Use the scalpel blade to scrape off any remaining soft tissue from the bones or rub the bones with sterile cloth tissues. At this point, femur and tibia are still connected.
  12. Remove patella by cutting, then cut knee joint ligaments to separate bones finally.
  13. Spray separated bones with 70% ethanol, let air dry and place each bone into a 50 ml centrifuge tube with cell culture medium (DMEM + 1% penicillin/streptomycin (Pen/Strep)) to keep them moist.
  14. Now switch under a sterile cell culture laminar flow hood.

B. Flushing of Rabbit MSC from Bones and Expansion (Cell Culture Hood)

  1. Collect bones from tubes and place them into 150 mm dishes using sterile forceps.
  2. Remove both bone ends with a sterile saw and move pieces to new 150 mm dishes.
  3. Fill a 10 ml syringe with medium (DMEM), attach an 18 gauge needle and insert into the opening of the bone marrow.
  4. Then, rinse marrow cavity with medium to flush the bone marrow into the dish. Afterwards, rinse from the other end, if possible. If necessary, saw off more from the ends. If bone should break, just rinse the inside of the bone.
  5. Aspirate cell medium suspension into the syringe and rinse the bone marrow repeatedly until suspension is free floating through the bone marrow cavity and no further bone marrow-clots appear.
  6. Once bone marrow has been collected from all bones, disrupt the marrow clumps by passing through an 18 gauge needle: fill syringe with needle attached and force out into medium.
  7. Afterwards, filter the suspension through a cell filter into a 50 ml tube. In order to prevent cell loss, wash culture dish 2x with 10 ml medium and filter as well.
  8. Centrifuge suspension at 500 x g for 5 min at RT.
  9. Remove supernatant and resuspend cell pellet in 10 ml medium (DMEM + 1% Pen/Strep).
  10. Separate blood cells from Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells (PBMC) and mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) using a Biocoll Separating Solution.
  11. Fill 5 ml of Biocoll Separating Solution into a 15 ml tube and carefully add 5 ml of cell-suspension on top and centrifuge at 800 x g for 20 min at RT (without brake).
  12. Possible results see Figure 1: Being denser than Biocoll, red blood cells sediment to the bottom while PBMC and mesenchymal stem cells remain at the interface.
  13. Carefully remove interface into a 15 ml tube and wash with 5 ml PBS.
  14. Centrifuge as described in step 22, resuspend in 5 ml PBS and repeat 2-3x.
  15. Then, centrifuge again at 350 x g for 10 min at RT (with brake).
  16. Resuspend in 10 ml medium and count cells in a hemocytometer.
  17. Plate cells at an initial seeding density of approximately 5 x 106 in 150 mm dishes.
  18. After 2-3 days, remove non-adherent cells. You might have to rinse with PBS first in order to remove cell debris. Add fresh complete medium (DMEM + 10% Fetal Calf Serum (FCS) + 1% Pen/Strep) afterwards.
  19. Feed cells every 3-4 days (Figure 2).
  20. After 5-10 days, passage the cells for the first time.

C. Preparation of Fibrin Clots in vitro

  1. At the day of implantation, release adherent cells from flasks/dishes by a 3 min-exposure to 0.25% trypsin-EDTA. Stop trypsinization by adding complete medium.
  2. Distribute cells in a 50 ml falcon tube and wash them twice with PBS.
  3. Determine cell viability and numbers by trypan blue staining.
  4. Add 50,000 cells/microcentrifuge tube and collect pellets by centrifugation at 500 x g for 5 min at RT. Prepare a mastermix for at least one more clot as needed.
  5. Resuspend the cell pellet in 17 μl PBS and mix 25 μl of the fibrinogen component of TISSUCOL-Kit with this 17 μl MSC suspension.
  6. Take a sterile plate with pre-drilled holes (3x3.6 mm) in accordance to the drill holes in vivo (Figure 3).
  7. First, inoculate 4 μl thrombin solution (500 IU/ml) into one hole, followed by immediate addition of 42 μl fibrinogen-cell-suspension and again 4 μl thrombin solution on top. Do not mix the suspension to avoid clotting in the pipette tip. First, the 50 μl volume of the pipetted fibrinogen-cell-suspension will protrude the rim of the pre-drilled holes without melting due to the surface tension. However, after complete clotting (after 60 min) the clot is contracting and fits into the pre-drilled hole.
  8. Remove the clot carefully using a blunt forceps and place into a microcentrifuge tube with PBS. Prepare 2 clots/animal.
  9. Take the clots to the surgery room.

D. Implantation of Allogeneic Mesenchymal Stem Cells in Fibrin Clots

  1. Induce anesthesia to rabbit (NZW, male, 3.5-4.0 kg body weight, 5-6 months old) by i.v. injection of propofol (10 mg/kg body weight).
  2. Shave the knee to be operated on with an electric clipper and vacuum the fur. All the procedures named before are performed in a surgery preparation room to avoid contamination of the sterile environment of the operating room.
  3. After intubation, maintain anesthesia with 1.5 mg/kg/min propofol and 0.05 mg/kg/min fentanyl intravenously. Monitor anesthesia by using capnography, pulse oximetry and pulse rate.
  4. Disinfect the shaved knee thoroughly and cover the rest of rabbit with a sterile dressing.
  5. Palpate the patella and perform a skin incision medial to the patella.
  6. Open the knee joint by a medial parapatellar arthrotomy under sterile conditions. Try to avoid cutting any small superficial blood vessels.
  7. Displace the patella laterally (Figure 4).
  8. After inspection of the knee joint for any concomitant cartilage lesions or joint anomalies, create two osteochondral defects (3 mm deep, figure eight-shaped) in the trochlear groove with a sterile air operating power drill (3.6 mm in diameter) with a stop-device (Figure 5) .
  9. Clean the defects and rinse them with sterile saline.
  10. Prior to implantation, fill 20 μl of fibrin glue into the defects and distribute them evenly onto the bottom of the defect.
  11. Then implant the clots press-fitted into the figure eight-shaped defect.
  12. After clotting, relocate the patella within the trochlear groove and bend and stretch the knee a few times.
  13. Displace the patella laterally once again and check if fibrinogen-cell-clots are still in place.
  14. Replace the patella again and finish the operation with wound closure in layers with single button sutures (4-0 Vicryl) and a continuous cutaneous suture (4-0 Monocryl) (both with absorbable suture material).
  15. Finally, seal the wound with a spray dressing permeable to water vapor.
  16. For post-operative care, the wound is checked daily for 7 days. The rabbits receive for post-operative analgesia Carprofen 4 mg/kg s.c. every 24 hr (for 4 days) and Buprenorphin 0.03 mg/kg s.c. every 12 hr (for 2.5 days). A stabilization of the knee (e.g. dressing) is not necessary.

Results

The described surgical technique permits a successful isolation and implantation of allogeneic mesenchymal stem cells into an artificial osteochondral defect. The experimental setup resulted in a successful integration of the implant into the surrounding cartilage.

The defect was filled by repair tissue with similar biomechanical properties and similar durability compared to the surrounding cartilage. The fibrin-cell-clot was prepared in vitro on a sterile plate with pre-drilled holes...

Discussion

In recent years, the possibility of treating complex articular osteochondral defects - such as those resulting from osteochondritis dissecans, osteonecrosis and trauma - with Tissue Engineering approaches became more and more attractive. In the previously mentioned pathologic entities, tissue damage extends to the subchondral bone and involves two tissues characterized by different intrinsic healing capacities 1. There is an increasing interest in the role of subchondral bone for the pathogenic processes of os...

Disclosures

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgements

This project was funded by the German Research Association (grant HE 4578/3-1) and partially by the FP7 EU-Project “GAMBA” NMP3-SL-2010-245993.

Materials

NameCompanyCatalog NumberComments
DMEMBiochrom AGF 0415
FCSPAN Biotech GmbH0401
PropofolFresenius Kabi
Penicillin/StreptomycinBiochrom AGA 22101,000 units/10 μg/μl in 0.9% NaCl
PBS Dulbecco (1X)Biochrom AGL1815
Ethanol (70%)Merck KGaA410230
Trypan Blue Solution (0.4%)Sigma-AldrichT8154
Biocoll Separation Sol.Biochrom AGL6115Isotonic solution Density: 1,077 g/ml
Trypsin-EDTA 0.05%Invitrogen GmbH25300-054
FentanylDeltaSelectGmBH1819340
NaCl solution (0.9%)BBraun8333A193
Syringes (Injekt)BBraun4606108V
Needles (Sterican)BBraun4657519
Forceps (blunt/sharp)Aesculap
ScissorsAesculap
ScalpelsFeather Safety Razor Co02.001.30.022
Pipettes researchEppendorf
Bone CutterAesculap
Tissue culture dishes 100 mm/150 mmTPP AG93100/93150Growth area 60.1 mm2/147.8 mm2
Tissue culture flasks 25/75 mm2TPP AG90025/9007525 mm2, 75 mm2
Centrifuge Tubes (50 ml)TPP AG91050Gamma-sterilized
CO2 IncubatorForma Scientific Inc.
Cell culture laminar flow hood Hera SafeHeraeus Instruments
Sterile sawAesculap
Centrifuge Megafuge 2.0 RHeraeus Instruments
HemocytometerBrand GmbH+Co KG717810Neubauer
Air operated power drillAesculap
TISSUCOL-Kit 1.0 ml ImmunoBaxter2546648
Fibers (4-0 Monocryl, 4-0 Vicryl)Ethicon
Spray dressing (OpSite)Smith&Nephew66004978Permeable for water vapor

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Osteochondral DefectsRabbit s Knee JointAllogeneic Mesenchymal Stem CellsFibrin ClotsArticular CartilageSubchondral BoneRestorationSurgical Treatment OptionsAutologous TransplantsAllogeneic TransplantsDonor Site Morbidity

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