Zucchelli Eleonora, Birchall Martin, Bulstrode Neil W, Ferretti Patrizia
Stem Cells and Regenerative Medicine Section, UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
UCL Ear Institute, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
Front Cell Dev Biol. 2020 Jul 28;8:666. doi: 10.3389/fcell.2020.00666. eCollection 2020.
Microtia (underdeveloped ear) is a rare congenital dysmorphology affecting the development of the outer ear. Although human microtic cartilage has not been fully characterized, chondrogenic cells derived from this tissue have been proposed as a suitable source for autologous auricular reconstruction. The aim of this study was to further characterize native microtic cartilage and investigate the properties of cartilage stem/progenitor cells (CSPCs) derived from it. Two-dimensional (2D) systems are most commonly used to assess the chondrogenic potential of somatic stem cells , but limit cell interactions and differentiation. Hence here we investigated the behavior of microtic CSPCs in three-dimensional spheroid cultures. Remarkable similarities between human microtic cartilages from five patients, as compared to normal cartilage, were observed notwithstanding possibly different etiologies of the disease. Native microtic cartilage displayed poorly defined perichondrium and hyper-cellularity, an immature phenotype that resembled that of the normal developing human auricular cartilage we studied in parallel. Crucially, our analysis of microtic ears revealed for the first time that, unlike normal cartilage, microtic cartilages are vascularized. Importantly, CSPCs isolated from human microtic and normal ear cartilages were found to recapitulate many characteristics of pathological and healthy tissues, respectively, when allowed to differentiate as spheroids, but not in monolayer cultures. Noteworthily, starting from initially homogeneous cell pellets, CSPC spheroids spontaneously underwent a maturation process in culture, and formed two regions (inner and outer region) separated by a boundary, with distinct cell types that differed in chondrogenic commitment as indicated by expression of chondrogenic markers. Compared to normal ear-derived spheroids, microtic spheroids were asymmetric, hyper-cellularized and the inner and outer regions did not develop properly. Hence, their organization resembled that of native microtic cartilage. Together, our results identify novel features of microtic ears and highlight the importance of 3D self-organizing systems for better understanding somatic stem cell behavior and disease modeling. Our observations of ear-derived chondrogenic stem cell behavior have implications for choice of cells for tissue engineered reconstructive purposes and for modeling the etiopathogenesis of microtia.
小耳畸形(耳部发育不全)是一种影响外耳发育的罕见先天性畸形。尽管人类小耳软骨尚未得到充分表征,但源自该组织的软骨生成细胞已被提议作为自体耳廓重建的合适来源。本研究的目的是进一步表征天然小耳软骨,并研究源自它的软骨干细胞/祖细胞(CSPCs)的特性。二维(2D)系统最常用于评估体干细胞的软骨生成潜力,但限制了细胞间相互作用和分化。因此,在这里我们研究了小耳CSPCs在三维球体培养中的行为。尽管疾病病因可能不同,但观察到五名患者的人类小耳软骨与正常软骨之间存在显著相似性。天然小耳软骨显示出界定不清的软骨膜和细胞过多,这是一种不成熟的表型,类似于我们同时研究的正常发育中的人类耳廓软骨。至关重要的是,我们对小耳的分析首次发现,与正常软骨不同,小耳软骨是血管化的。重要的是,当允许从人类小耳和正常耳软骨中分离的CSPCs作为球体分化时,发现它们分别概括了病理组织和健康组织的许多特征,但在单层培养中则不然。值得注意的是,从最初均匀的细胞团开始,CSPC球体在培养中自发经历成熟过程,并形成由边界分隔的两个区域(内部和外部区域),具有不同的细胞类型,其软骨生成倾向如软骨生成标志物的表达所示有所不同。与源自正常耳的球体相比,小耳球体不对称、细胞过多,内部和外部区域发育不正常。因此,它们的组织结构类似于天然小耳软骨。总之,我们的结果确定了小耳的新特征,并强调了三维自组织系统对于更好地理解体干细胞行为和疾病建模的重要性。我们对源自耳朵的软骨生成干细胞行为的观察对于组织工程重建目的的细胞选择以及小耳畸形病因发病机制的建模具有启示意义。