Tianbai Wang, Sung Yeon Kim, Yifan Peng, Jane Zheng, Matthew D Layne, Joanne E Murphy-Ullrich, Michael B Albro
{"title":"Autoinduction-Based Quantification of <i>In Situ</i> TGF-β Activity in Native and Engineered Cartilage.","authors":"Tianbai Wang, Sung Yeon Kim, Yifan Peng, Jane Zheng, Matthew D Layne, Joanne E Murphy-Ullrich, Michael B Albro","doi":"10.1089/ten.TEC.2024.0190","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β) is a potent growth factor that regulates the homeostasis of native cartilage and is administered as an anabolic supplement for engineered cartilage growth. The quantification of TGF-β activity in live tissues <i>in situ</i> remains a significant challenge, as conventional activity assessments (e.g., Western blotting of intracellular signaling molecules or reporter cell assays) are unable to measure absolute levels of TGF-β activity in three-dimensional tissues. In this study, we develop a quantification platform established on TGF-β's autoinduction response, whereby active TGF-β (aTGF-β) signaling in cells induces their biosynthesis and secretion of new TGF-β in its latent form (LTGF-β). As such, cell-secreted LTGF-β can serve as a robust, non-destructive, label-free biomarker for quantifying <i>in situ</i> activity of TGF-β in live cartilage tissues. Here, we detect LTGF-β1 secretion levels for bovine native tissue explants and engineered tissue constructs treated with varying doses of media-supplemented aTGF-β3 using an isoform-specific ELISA. We demonstrate that: 1) LTGF-β secretion levels increase proportionally to aTGF-β exposure, reaching 7.4- and 6.6-fold increases in native and engineered cartilage, respectively; 2) synthesized LTGF-β exhibits low retention in both native and engineered cartilage tissue; and 3) secreted LTGF-β is stable in conditioned media for 2 weeks, thus enabling a reliable biological standard curve between LTGF-β secretion and exposed TGF-β activity. Accordingly, we perform quantifications of TGF-β activity in bovine native cartilage, demonstrating up to 0.59 ng/mL in response to physiological dynamic loading. We further quantify the <i>in situ</i> TGF-β activity in aTGF-β-conjugated scaffolds for engineered tissue, which exhibits 1.81 ng/mL of TGF-β activity as a result of a nominal 3 μg/mL loading dose. Overall, cell-secreted LTGF-β can serve as a robust biomarker to quantify <i>in situ</i> activity of TGF-β in live cartilage tissue and can be potentially applied for a wide range of applications, including multiple tissue types and tissue engineering platforms with different cell populations and scaffolds.</p>","PeriodicalId":23154,"journal":{"name":"Tissue engineering. Part C, Methods","volume":" ","pages":"522-532"},"PeriodicalIF":2.7000,"publicationDate":"2024-11-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Tissue engineering. Part C, Methods","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1089/ten.TEC.2024.0190","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"2024/10/9 0:00:00","PubModel":"Epub","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"CELL & TISSUE ENGINEERING","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β) is a potent growth factor that regulates the homeostasis of native cartilage and is administered as an anabolic supplement for engineered cartilage growth. The quantification of TGF-β activity in live tissues in situ remains a significant challenge, as conventional activity assessments (e.g., Western blotting of intracellular signaling molecules or reporter cell assays) are unable to measure absolute levels of TGF-β activity in three-dimensional tissues. In this study, we develop a quantification platform established on TGF-β's autoinduction response, whereby active TGF-β (aTGF-β) signaling in cells induces their biosynthesis and secretion of new TGF-β in its latent form (LTGF-β). As such, cell-secreted LTGF-β can serve as a robust, non-destructive, label-free biomarker for quantifying in situ activity of TGF-β in live cartilage tissues. Here, we detect LTGF-β1 secretion levels for bovine native tissue explants and engineered tissue constructs treated with varying doses of media-supplemented aTGF-β3 using an isoform-specific ELISA. We demonstrate that: 1) LTGF-β secretion levels increase proportionally to aTGF-β exposure, reaching 7.4- and 6.6-fold increases in native and engineered cartilage, respectively; 2) synthesized LTGF-β exhibits low retention in both native and engineered cartilage tissue; and 3) secreted LTGF-β is stable in conditioned media for 2 weeks, thus enabling a reliable biological standard curve between LTGF-β secretion and exposed TGF-β activity. Accordingly, we perform quantifications of TGF-β activity in bovine native cartilage, demonstrating up to 0.59 ng/mL in response to physiological dynamic loading. We further quantify the in situ TGF-β activity in aTGF-β-conjugated scaffolds for engineered tissue, which exhibits 1.81 ng/mL of TGF-β activity as a result of a nominal 3 μg/mL loading dose. Overall, cell-secreted LTGF-β can serve as a robust biomarker to quantify in situ activity of TGF-β in live cartilage tissue and can be potentially applied for a wide range of applications, including multiple tissue types and tissue engineering platforms with different cell populations and scaffolds.
期刊介绍:
Tissue Engineering is the preeminent, biomedical journal advancing the field with cutting-edge research and applications that repair or regenerate portions or whole tissues. This multidisciplinary journal brings together the principles of engineering and life sciences in the creation of artificial tissues and regenerative medicine. Tissue Engineering is divided into three parts, providing a central forum for groundbreaking scientific research and developments of clinical applications from leading experts in the field that will enable the functional replacement of tissues.
Tissue Engineering Methods (Part C) presents innovative tools and assays in scaffold development, stem cells and biologically active molecules to advance the field and to support clinical translation. Part C publishes monthly.