PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2022

Mechanical activation drives tenogenic differentiation of human mesenchymal stem cells in aligned dense collagen hydrogels

Park H, Nazhat SN, et al.

Biomaterials

McGill University, Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre

RESEARCH SUMMARY
This study used gel aspiration-ejection (GAE) to rapidly fabricate anisotropic aligned dense collagen (ADC) hydrogels (5–13 wt% collagen) with tendon-like alignment and stiffness. Acellular ADCs tolerated short-term high-strain mechanoactivation (48 h at 20% strain) and showed increased collagen fibril thickness and improved tensile properties, including ~2.7–3.0× increases in ultimate tensile strength and apparent modulus after static strain and a significant modulus increase after cyclic-rest loading. Human bone marrow MSCs were 3D-embedded in ADCs and mechanically activated for 48 h under serum- and growth factor-free conditions; both static and cyclic-rest profiles drove strong tenogenic commitment (>12× scleraxis upregulation) while suppressing or maintaining osteogenic (RUNX2) and chondrogenic (aggrecan) markers compared with controls. Following mechanoactivation, constructs were matured for 19 additional days without external loading, resulting in polarized, aligned cells and deposition of tendon-associated matrix proteins (COL I/III/VI, tenascin-C, tenomodulin), with cyclic-rest stimulation producing markedly higher tenomodulin protein levels, indicating loading-profile-dependent maturation toward a tendon-like phenotype.

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

MechanoCulture T6UniVert

A CellScale MechanoCulture T6 uniaxial stimulation bioreactor was used to mechanically activate aligned dense collagen (ADC) hydrogels (acellular and MSC-seeded) during a dedicated 48 h mechanoactivation phase. Constructs were mounted and subjected to high-strain uniaxial tensile programs at 20% strain, including a static strain/hold regimen and a cyclic-rest profile (strain, hold, release to baseline, hold) repeated over 48 h under hydrated, temperature-controlled conditions (cellular constructs in serum-free DMEM; acellular constructs in PBS). Following mechanoactivation and subsequent culture, a CellScale UniVert was used for endpoint tensile mechanical testing of ADC gels, using a 10 N load cell and a constant extension rate (0.1 mm/s) to quantify changes in apparent modulus and ultimate tensile strength associated with collagen densification/alignment and load-induced remodeling.
AUTHORS

Hyeree Park, Showan N. Nazhat, Derek H. Rosenzweig.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

Biomaterials

YEAR

2022

INSTITUTIONS

McGill University, Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre

COUNTRIES

Canada

INSTRUMENT USED

MechanoCulture T6UniVert

TESTING METHODS

Hydrated and Temperature Controlled TestingTensile TestingViscoelastic & Time-Dependent Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

Hydrogel Mechanical TestingMechanotransductionStem Cell MechanobiologyTendon Tissue Engineering & Ligament Mechanics

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