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Rejuvenated Stem/Progenitor Cells for Cartilage Repair Using the Pluripotent Stem Cell Technology

Naoki Nakayama, Sudheer Ravuri, Johnny Huard

Bioengineering · 2021 · ▲ 6 citations

Abstract

It is widely accepted that chondral defects in articular cartilage of adult joints are never repaired spontaneously, which is considered to be one of the major causes of age-related degenerative joint disorders, such as osteoarthritis. Since mobilization of subchondral bone (marrow) cells and addition of chondrocytes or mesenchymal stromal cells into full-thickness defects show some degrees of repair, the lack of self-repair activity in adult articular cartilage can be attributed to lack of reparative cells in adult joints. In contrast, during a fetal or embryonic stage, joint articular cartilage has a scar-less repair activity, suggesting that embryonic joints may contain cells responsible for such activity, which can be chondrocytes, chondroprogenitors, or other cell types such as skeletal stem cells. In this respect, the tendency of pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) to give rise to cells of embryonic characteristics will provide opportunity, especially for humans, to obtain cells carrying similar cartilage self-repair activity. Making use of PSC-derived cells for cartilage repair is still in a basic or preclinical research phase. This review will provide brief overviews on how human PSCs have been used for cartilage repair studies.

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Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.3390/bioengineering8040046
Canonical
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Fetched
2026-06-18 MST

Cite this

APA
Nakayama, N., Ravuri, S., &amp; Huard, J. (2021). Rejuvenated Stem/Progenitor Cells for Cartilage Repair Using the Pluripotent Stem Cell Technology. <em>Bioengineering</em>. https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering8040046
Vancouver
Nakayama N, Ravuri S, Huard J. Rejuvenated Stem/Progenitor Cells for Cartilage Repair Using the Pluripotent Stem Cell Technology. Bioengineering. 2021. doi:10.3390/bioengineering8040046.
BibTeX
@article{naoki2021Rejuve, title = {Rejuvenated Stem/Progenitor Cells for Cartilage Repair Using the Pluripotent Stem Cell Technology}, author = {Naoki Nakayama and Sudheer Ravuri and Johnny Huard}, journal = {Bioengineering}, year = {2021}, doi = {10.3390/bioengineering8040046}, }

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