Traditional methods of cartilage tissue engineering rely on the use of scaffolds. Although successful chondrogenesis has been reported in scaffold-based constructs, the use of exogenous materials has limited their application due to eliciting host immunogenic responses and potentially resulting in construct failure. As a result, tissue engineering approaches, which aim to generate scaffold-free cartilaginous constructs, have become of particular interest. Here, we generated stable three-dimensional scaffold-free cartilaginous constructs by cultivating expanded pediatric nasal chondrocyte multilayers in a slow turning lateral vessel bioreactor system under chemically defined media. Bioreactor cultivation resulted in increased construct cellularity, fourfold tissue thickness, and 200% sulfated glycosaminoglycan deposition with respect to static culture equivalent cultures. These improvements led to significantly enhanced mechanical and biochemical properties of bioreactor-cultivated constructs, allowing them to support their own weight, while static culture constructs remained fragile. Consequently, bioreactor-cultivated constructs closely resembled native nasal cartilage tissue histologically, mechanically, and biochemically. We propose that this method of cartilage construct formation could be used to obtain readily available human scaffold-free cartilaginous constructs.
Keywords: bioreactor; cartilage; human; nasal; scaffold free.