AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates if mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) can transfer mitochondria to chondrocytes, which may help in treating articular cartilage defects.
  • Researchers used various techniques to visualize and measure mitochondrial transfer between these cell types, finding that this transfer happens within the first 16 hours through different methods.
  • After 28 days, chondrocytes receiving MSC mitochondria showed increased DNA and proteoglycan levels, indicating a positive effect on cartilage repair, but the transferred mitochondria could not be detected after a year.

Article Abstract

Objective: Allogeneic mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) are used in the 1-stage treatment of articular cartilage defects. The aim of this study is to investigate whether transport of mitochondria exists between chondrocytes and MSCs and to investigate whether the transfer of mitochondria to chondrocytes contributes to the mechanism of action of MSCs.

Design: Chondrocytes and MSCs were stained with MitoTracker, and CellTrace was used to distinguish between cell types. The uptake of fluorescent mitochondria was measured in cocultures using flow cytometry. Transport was visualized using fluorescence microscopy. Microvesicles were isolated and the presence of mitochondria was assessed. Mitochondria were isolated from MSCs and transferred to chondrocytes using MitoCeption. Pellets of chondrocytes, chondrocytes with transferred MSC mitochondria, and cocultures were cultured for 28 days. DNA content and proteoglycan content were measured. Mitochondrial DNA of cultured pellets and of repair cartilage tissue was quantified.

Results: Mitochondrial transfer occurred bidirectionally within the first 4 hours until 16 hours of coculture. Transport took place via tunneling nanotubes, direct cell-cell contact, and extracellular vesicles. After 28 days of pellet culture, DNA content and proteoglycan deposition were higher in chondrocyte pellets to which MSC mitochondria were transferred than the control groups. No donor mitochondrial DNA was traceable in the biopsies, whereas an increase in MSC mitochondrial DNA was seen in the pellets.

Conclusions: These results suggest that mitochondrial transport plays a role in the chondroinductive effect of MSCs on chondrocytes However, no transferred mitochondria could be traced back after 1 year.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9924973PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/19476035221126346DOI Listing

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