Using primary bovine chondrocytes, ie cartilage cells from cows, the researchers improved methods to grow cartilage tissue in a laboratory environment.
In future, these results may help the development of neocartilage production for actual cartilage repair.
For this, stem cells could be grown to provide unlimited amount of material for tissue engineering.
Articular cartilage is tissue that is found on all the joint surfaces in the body. Since the tissue is not supplied with any blood vessels, it has a low self-repair capacity.
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In serious cases, osteoarthritis can mean the loss of practically the entire cartilage tissue in the joint. While the condition causes pain and immobility for the individual, it also burdens society with accumulated medical costs.
"There is currently no good cure for osteoarthritis," said Janne Ylarinne, doctoral student at the Umea University in Sweden.
"Surgical treatments may help when the damage to the cartilage is relatively minor, whereas joint replacement surgery is the only available solution for people with larger cartilage damage," said Ylarinne.
Tissue engineering provides a possible solution to osteoarthritis. The findings provided useful information for efforts to develop new methods to produce cartilage-like "neotissues" in a laboratory environment.
In the engineering process, the cells, the signalling molecules and the scaffold, ie artificial support material, are combined to regenerate tissue at the damaged site in the joint.
The process is difficult and much of what constitutes suitable growth factors and a mechanical loading environment is still unknown.
More research is needed to improve the tissue quality and make it more structurally similar to the hyaline cartilage found in the human body.