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1.
In previous work we demonstrated that the matrix-forming phenotype of cultured human cells from whole meniscus was enhanced by hypoxia (5% oxygen). Because the meniscus contains an inner region that is devoid of vasculature and an outer vascular region, here we investigate, by gene expression analysis, the separate responses of cells isolated from the inner and outer meniscus to lowered oxygen, and compared it with the response of articular chondrocytes. In aggregate culture of outer meniscus cells, hypoxia (5% oxygen) increased the expression of type II collagen and SOX9 (Sry-related HMG box-9), and decreased the expression of type I collagen. In contrast, with inner meniscus cells, there was no increase in SOX9, but type II collagen and type I collagen increased. The articular chondrocytes exhibited little response to 5% oxygen in aggregate culture, with no significant differences in the expression of these matrix genes and SOX9. In both aggregate cultures of outer and inner meniscus cells, but not in chondrocytes, there was increased expression of collagen prolyl 4-hydroxylase (P4H)alpha(I) in response to 5% oxygen, and this hypoxia-induced expression of P4H alpha(I) was blocked in monolayer cultures of meniscus cells by the hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1alpha inhibitor (YC-1). In fresh tissue from the outer and inner meniscus, the levels of expression of the HIF-1alpha gene and downstream target genes (namely, those encoding P4H alpha(I) and HIF prolyl 4-hydroxylase) were significantly higher in the inner meniscus than in the outer meniscus. Thus, this study revealed that inner meniscus cells were less responsive to 5% oxygen tension than were outer meniscus cells, and they were both more sensitive than articular chondrocytes from a similar joint. These results suggest that the vasculature and greater oxygen tension in the outer meniscus may help to suppress cartilage-like matrix formation.  相似文献   

2.
In previous work we demonstrated that the matrix-forming phenotype of cultured human cells from whole meniscus was enhanced by hypoxia (5% oxygen). Because the meniscus contains an inner region that is devoid of vasculature and an outer vascular region, here we investigate, by gene expression analysis, the separate responses of cells isolated from the inner and outer meniscus to lowered oxygen, and compared it with the response of articular chondrocytes. In aggregate culture of outer meniscus cells, hypoxia (5% oxygen) increased the expression of type II collagen and SOX9 (Sry-related HMG box-9), and decreased the expression of type I collagen. In contrast, with inner meniscus cells, there was no increase in SOX9, but type II collagen and type I collagen increased. The articular chondrocytes exhibited little response to 5% oxygen in aggregate culture, with no significant differences in the expression of these matrix genes and SOX9. In both aggregate cultures of outer and inner meniscus cells, but not in chondrocytes, there was increased expression of collagen prolyl 4-hydroxylase (P4H)α(I) in response to 5% oxygen, and this hypoxia-induced expression of P4Hα(I) was blocked in monolayer cultures of meniscus cells by the hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1α inhibitor (YC-1). In fresh tissue from the outer and inner meniscus, the levels of expression of the HIF-1α gene and downstream target genes (namely, those encoding P4Hα(I) and HIF prolyl 4-hydroxylase) were significantly higher in the inner meniscus than in the outer meniscus. Thus, this study revealed that inner meniscus cells were less responsive to 5% oxygen tension than were outer meniscus cells, and they were both more sensitive than articular chondrocytes from a similar joint. These results suggest that the vasculature and greater oxygen tension in the outer meniscus may help to suppress cartilage-like matrix formation.  相似文献   

3.
The knee meniscus exhibits significant spatial variations in biochemical composition and cell morphology that reflect distinct phenotypes of cells located in the radial inner and outer regions. Associated with these cell phenotypes is a spatially heterogeneous microstructure and mechanical environment with the innermost regions experiencing higher fluid pressures and lower tensile strains than the outer regions. It is presently unknown, however, how meniscus tissue mechanics correlate with the local micromechanical environment of cells. In this study, theoretical models were developed to study mechanics of inner and outer meniscus cells with varying geometries. The results for an applied biaxial strain predict significant regional differences in the cellular mechanical environment with evidence of tensile strains along the collagen fiber direction of ~0.07 for the rounded inner cells, as compared to levels of 0.02–0.04 for the elongated outer meniscus cells. The results demonstrate an important mechanical role of extracellular matrix anisotropy and cell morphology in regulating the region-specific micromechanics of meniscus cells, that may further play a role in modulating cellular responses to mechanical stimuli.  相似文献   

4.
Using fluorescence immunocytochemistry, transmission electron microscopy and Western blotting, we have shown that caveolae and caveolin are abundant on chondrocytes of different cartilaginous structures of newborn and adult rat knee joints. Caveolin was detected in chondrocytes of the outer layer of articular cartilage, in the fibrocartilage of the menisci, and in fibrocartilage-like cells at tendon and ligament insertions. Electron microscopical studies revealed caveolae-like invaginations along the plasmalemmal membrane of articular chondrocytes and fibrocartilage cells. Immunoblot analysis demonstrated caveolin in detergent-insoluble and soluble complexes isolated from cultured rat chondrocytes.  相似文献   

5.
Work relating the mechanical states of articular cartilage chondrocytes to their biosynthetic responses is based on measurements in isolated cells or cells in explant samples removed from their natural in situ environment. Neither the mechanics nor the associated biological responses of chondrocytes have ever been studied in cartilage within a joint of a live animal, and no such measurements have ever been performed using physiologically relevant joint loading through muscular contractions. The purpose of this study was to design and apply a method to study the mechanics of chondrocytes in the exposed but fully intact knee of live animals, which was loaded near-physiologically through muscular contraction. In order to achieve this purpose, we developed an accurate and reliable method based on two-photon laser excitation microscopy. Near-physiological knee joint loading was achieved through controlled electrical activation of the knee extensor muscles that compress the articulating surfaces of the femur, tibia and patella. Accuracy of the system was assessed by inserting micro-beads of known dimensions into the articular cartilage of the mouse knee and comparing the measured volumes and diameters in the principal directions with known values of the beads. Accuracy was best in the plane perpendicular to the optical axis (average error = 1%) while it was slightly worse, but still excellent, along the optical axis (average error = 3%). Reliability of cell volume and shape measurements was 0.5% on average, and 2.9% in the worst-case-scenario. Pilot measurements of chondrocyte deformations upon sub-maximal muscular loading causing a mean articular contact pressure of 1.9 ± 0.2 MPa showed an "instantaneous" decrease in cell height (17 ± 4.5%) and loss of cell volume (22.3 ± 2.4%) that took minutes to recover upon deactivation of the knee extensor muscles.  相似文献   

6.
The knee meniscus, a fibrocartilaginous tissue located in the knee joint, is characterized by heterogeneity in extracellular matrix and biomechanical properties. To recreate these properties using a tissue engineering approach, co‐cultures of meniscus cells (MCs) and articular chondrocytes (ACs) were seeded in varying ratios (100:0, 75:25, 50:50, 25:75, and 0:100) on poly‐L ‐lactic acid (PLLA) scaffolds and cultured in serum‐free medium for 4 weeks. Histological, biochemical, and biomechanical tests were used to assess constructs at the end time point. Strong staining for collagen and glycosaminoglycan (GAG) was observed in all groups. Constructs with 100% MCs were positive for collagen I and constructs cultured with 100% ACs were positive for collagen II, while a mixture of collagen I and II was observed in other co‐culture groups. Total collagen and GAG per construct increased as the percentage of ACs increased (27 ± 8 µg, 0% AC to 45 ± 8 µg, 100% ACs for collagen and 12 ± 4 µg, 0% ACs to 40 ± 5 µg, 100% ACs for GAG). Compressive modulus (instantaneous and relaxation modulus) of the constructs was significantly higher in the 100% ACs group (63 ± 12 and 22 ± 9 kPa, respectively) when compared to groups with higher percentage of MCs. No differences in tensile properties were noted among groups. Specific co‐culture ratios were identified mimicking the GAG/DW of the inner (0:100, 25:75, and 50:50) and outer regions (100:0) of the meniscus. Overall, it was demonstrated that co‐culturing MCs and ACs on PLLA scaffolds results in functional tissue engineered meniscus constructs with a spectrum of biochemical and biomechanical properties. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2009;103: 808–816. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

7.
The meniscus plays important roles in knee function and mechanics and is characterized by a heterogeneous matrix composition. The changes in meniscus vascularization observed during growth suggest that the tissue‐specific composition may be the result of a maturation process. This study has the aim to characterize the structural and biochemical variations that occur in the swine meniscus with age. To this purpose, menisci were collected from young and adult pigs and divided into different zones. In study 1, both lateral and medial menisci were divided into the anterior horn, the body and the posterior horn for the evaluation of glycosaminoglycans (GAGs), collagen 1 and 2 content. In study 2, the menisci were sectioned into the inner, the intermediate and the outer zones to determine the variations in the cell phenotype along with the inner–outer direction, through gene expression analysis. According to the results, the swine meniscus is characterized by an increasing enrichment in the cartilaginous component with age, with an increasing deposition in the anterior horn (GAGs and collagen 2; P < 0.01 both); moreover, this cartilaginous matrix strongly increases in the inner avascular and intermediate zone, as a consequence of a specific differentiation of meniscal cells towards a cartilaginous phenotype (collagen 2, P < 0.01). The obtained data add new information on the changes that accompany meniscus maturation, suggesting a specific response of meniscal cells to the regional mechanical stimuli in the knee joint.  相似文献   

8.
We have developed a mouse in which the Cre recombinase gene has been targeted to exon 1 of the matrilin-1 gene (Matn1) to investigate the origins of articular chondrocytes and the development of the knee joint. Analysis of joints from offspring of Matn1-Cre/R26R crosses demonstrated that articular chondrocytes are derived from cells that have never expressed matrilin-1 whereas the remainder of the chondrocytes in the cartilage anlagen expresses matrilin-1. A band of chondrocytes adjacent to the developing interzone in the E13.5 day knee joint became apparent because these chondrocytes did not turn on expression of matrilin-1 in contrast to the other chondrocytes of the anlagen. The chondrocytes of the presumptive articular surface therefore appear to arise directly from a subpopulation of early chondrocytes that do not activate matrilin-1 expression rather than by redifferentiation from the flattened cells of the interzone. In addition, lineage tracing using both Matn1-Cre/R26R and Col2a1-Cre/R26R lines indicated that non-cartilaginous structures in the knee such as cruciate ligament, synovium and some blood vessels are formed by cells derived from the early chondrocytes of the anlagen.  相似文献   

9.
Metabolic, biochemical and biomechanical differences between ankle and knee joint cartilage and chondrocytes including resistance to the effects of catabolic cytokines and fibronectin fragments may be relevant to differences in prevalence of OA in these joints. Although there is increasing information available on how chondrocytes from knee and hip joint cartilage recognise and respond to mechanical stimuli, knowledge of mechanotransduction in ankle joint chondrocytes is limited. This study was undertaken to (i) establish whether the response of normal ankle joint derived chondrocytes to mechanical stimulation in vitro was similar to that of normal and osteoarthritic knee joint derived chondrocytes and (ii) to investigate whether these chondrocytes showed differences in expression of integrin associated regulatory and signalling molecules. Unlike normal knee joint chondrocytes, ankle joint chondrocytes did not show an increase in relative levels of aggrecan mRNA when mechanically stimulated. No obvious change in protein tyrosine phosphorylation was seen in ankle chondrocytes subsequent to mechanical stimulation but these cells expressed elevated levels of tyrosine phosphorylated proteins at rest when compared to normal knee joint chondrocytes. Ankle joint chondrocytes showed an increase in protein kinase B phosphorylation following 1 min 0.33 Hz stimulation which was inhibited by the presence of antibodies to alpha5beta1 integrin. Ankle joint chondrocytes appeared to show significant differences in levels of the integrin-associated proteins CD98, CD147 and galectin 3, PKCgamma and differences in responses to glutamate were seen. Chondrocytes from ankle and knee joint cartilage respond differently to 0.33 Hz mechanical stimulation. This may be related to modified integrin-dependent mechanotransduction as a result of changes in expression of integrin regulatory molecules such as CD98 or differential expression and function of downstream components of the mechanotransduction pathway such as PKC or NMDA receptors.  相似文献   

10.
The biomechanical properties of articular cartilage change profoundly with aging. These changes have been linked with increased potential for cartilage degeneration and osteoarthritis. However, less is known about the change in biomechanical properties of chondrocytes with increasing age. Cell stiffness can affect mechanotransduction pathways and may alter cell function. We measured aging-related changes in the biomechanical properties of chondrocytes. Human chondrocytes were isolated from knee articular cartilage within 48 hours after death or from osteochondral specimens obtained from knee arthroplasty. Cells were divided into two age groups: between 18 and 35 years (18 -- 35); and greater than 55 years (55+) of age. The 55+ group was further subdivided based on visual grade of osteoarthritis: normal (N) or osteoarthritic (OA). The viscoelastic properties of the cell were measured using the previously described micropipette cell aspiration technique. The equilibrium modulus, instantaneous modulus, and apparent viscosity were significantly higher in the 55+ year age group than in the 18 -- 35 age group. On the other hand, no differences were found in the equilibrium modulus, instantaneous modulus, or apparent viscosity between the N and OA groups. The increase in cell stiffness can be attributed to altered mechanical properties of the cell membrane, the cytoplasm, or the cytoskeleton. Increased stiffness has been reported in osteoarthritic chondrocytes, which in turn has been attributed to the actin cytoskeleton. A similar mechanism may be responsible for our finding of increased stiffness in aging chondrocytes. With advancing age, changes in the biomechanical properties of the cell could alter molecular and biochemical responses.  相似文献   

11.
The mechanical properties of single cells play important roles in regulating cell-matrix interactions, potentially influencing the process of mechanotransduction. Recent studies also suggest that cellular mechanical properties may provide novel biological markers, or "biomarkers," of cell phenotype, reflecting specific changes that occur with disease, differentiation, or cellular transformation. Of particular interest in recent years has been the identification of such biomarkers that can be used to determine specific phenotypic characteristics of stem cells that separate them from primary, differentiated cells. The goal of this study was to determine the elastic and viscoelastic properties of three primary cell types of mesenchymal lineage (chondrocytes, osteoblasts, and adipocytes) and to test the hypothesis that primary differentiated cells exhibit distinct mechanical properties compared to adult stem cells (adipose-derived or bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells). In an adherent, spread configuration, chondrocytes, osteoblasts, and adipocytes all exhibited significantly different mechanical properties, with osteoblasts being stiffer than chondrocytes and both being stiffer than adipocytes. Adipose-derived and mesenchymal stem cells exhibited similar properties to each other, but were mechanically distinct from primary cells, particularly when comparing a ratio of elastic to relaxed moduli. These findings will help more accurately model the cellular mechanical environment in mesenchymal tissues, which could assist in describing injury thresholds and disease progression or even determining the influence of mechanical loading for tissue engineering efforts. Furthermore, the identification of mechanical properties distinct to stem cells could result in more successful sorting procedures to enrich multipotent progenitor cell populations.  相似文献   

12.
Ohashi T  Hagiwara M  Bader DL  Knight MM 《Biorheology》2006,43(3-4):201-214
The present study utilised pipette aspiration and simultaneous confocal microscopy to test the hypothesis that chondrocyte deformation is associated with distortion of intracellular organelles and activation of calcium signalling. Aspiration pressure was applied to isolated articular chondrocytes in increments of 2 cm of water every 60 seconds up to a maximum of 10 cm of water. At each pressure increment, confocal microscopy was used to visualise the mitochondria and nucleus labelled with JC-1 and Syto-16, respectively. To investigate intracellular calcium signalling, separate cells were labelled with Fluo 4, rapidly aspirated to 5 cm of water and then imaged for 5 minutes at a tare pressure of 0.1 cm of water. Partial cell aspiration was associated with distortion of the mitochondrial network, elongation of the nucleus and movement towards the pipette mouth. Treatment with cytochalasin D or nocodazole produced an increase in cell aspiration indicating that both the actin microfilaments and microtubules provide mechanical integrity to the cell. When the data was normalised to account for the increased cell deformation, both actin microfilaments and microtubules were shown to be necessary for strain transfer to the intracellular organelles. Mitochondria and nucleus deformation may both be involved in chondrocyte mechanotransduction as well as cellular and intracellular mechanics. In addition, pipette aspiration induced intracellular calcium signalling which may also form part of a mechanotransduction pathway. Alternatively calcium mobilisation may serve to modify actin polymerisation, thereby changing cell mechanics and membrane rigidity in order to facilitate localised cell deformation. These findings have important implications for our understanding of cell mechanics and mechanotransduction as well as interpretation and modelling of pipette aspiration data.  相似文献   

13.
1. To understand the meniscus-tears the architecture of their collagenic fibers is of interest, particularly so the connection of the fibers of the medial meniscus with the collateral ligament. 2. The ligaments of 12 knee joints have been studied macroscopically and with the aid of thick serial sections under polarized light. 3. The main portion of the tibial collateral ligament passes the articular space without any connection with the capsule or the meniscus. The upper oblique portion of the ligament runs inside the external zone of the meniscus to the posterior attachment of the latter. Immediately inferior to the articular space the oblique fibers have another attachment. 4. The findings in respect of the arrangement of the fibers in the menisci differ from those in earlier studies. Only in the external zone the fibers run approximately parallel to the outer border. After leaving the external zone the fibers run in an arched way through the middle zone. In the internal zone these fibers have nearly a radial direction. 5. The architecture of the menisci is discussed under functional aspects. It does not correspond to a "spring" but to a tendon, which is extended over a hypomochlion. 6. Forms and localisations of meniscus-tears have been discussed under viewpoint of architecture and compared with clinical results: The typical tear of the posterior segment of the medial meniscus is the horizontal cleavage. The present opinion according to which longitudinal tears are the typical meniscus lesion, seems to be doubtful.  相似文献   

14.
Articular cartilage has a distinct zonal architecture, and previous work has shown that chondrocytes from different zones exhibit variations in gene expression and biosynthesis. In this study, the material properties of single chondrocytes from the superficial and middle/deep zones of bovine distal metatarsal articular cartilage were determined using unconfined compression and digital videocapture. To determine the viscoelastic properties of zonal chondrocytes, unconfined creep compression experiments were performed and the resulting creep curves of individual cells were fit using a standard linear viscoelastic solid model. In the model, a fixed value of the Poisson's ratio was used, determined optically from direct compression of middle/deep chondrocytes. The two approaches used in this study yielded the following average material properties of single chondrocytes: Poisson's ratio of 0.26+/-0.08, instantaneous modulus of 1.06+/-0.82 kPa, relaxed modulus of 0.78+/-0.58 kPa, and apparent viscosity of 4.08+/-7.20 kPa s. Superficial zone chondrocytes were found to be significantly stiffer than middle/deep zone chondrocytes. Attachment time did not affect the stiffness of the cells. The zonal variation in viscoelastic properties may result from the distinct mechanical environments experienced by the cells in vivo. Identifying intrinsic differences in the biomechanics of superficial and middle/deep zone chondrocytes is an important component in understanding how biomechanics influence articular cartilage health and disease.  相似文献   

15.
童迅  贠喆  张栋  赵新文  曾照辉  于洋  马保安 《生物磁学》2013,(24):4648-4653
摘要目的:研究人正常软骨细胞及骨关节炎软骨细胞的体外分离、培养及鉴定方法,对其生物学特性进行对照并评价其生物学活性。方法:取人创伤性截肢与骨关节炎全膝置换的无菌膝关节软骨,采用两步酶消化法分离培养人关节软骨细胞,并进行传代培养。通过倒置相差显微镜下观察细胞形态,绘制生长曲线,测细胞增殖,甲苯胺蓝染色及Ⅱ型胶原免疫组织化学染色对细胞进行对照研究。结果:骨关节炎软骨细胞形态似成纤维细胞,生长速度明显较正常软骨细胞慢。MTT测细胞增殖显示,第2.4、6代骨关节炎软骨细胞在相同时间点大都比同代正常软骨细胞增殖速度慢(P〈0.05)。甲苯胺蓝及Ⅱ型胶原免疫组化染色显示,骨关节炎软骨细胞染色较正常软骨细胞浅,经多次传代后基本无着色。结论:正常软骨细胞5代以内细胞生长良好,生物学特性明显,5代以后出现去分化现象。骨关节炎软骨细胞增殖慢,生物学特征退变旱,符合软骨细胞退变的表现。这为骨关节炎在软骨细胞水平的研究提供了实验基础。  相似文献   

16.
Nerve growth factor (NGF) exerts its action through two types of receptor: high-affinity tyrosine kinase A receptor (trkA) and low-affinity p75 receptor. NGF has a neurotrophic role in central and peripheral nervous system development, but there is also clear evidence of its involvement in the developing skeleton. The aim of the present immunohistochemical study was to investigate the expression and distribution of NGF, trkA, and p75 in normal cartilaginous tissues from adult subjects: articular and meniscal cartilage of the knee, cartilage from the epiglottis, and intervertebral disc tissue. Detection of NGF mRNA was also performed by in situ hybridization. Immunoreaction for NGF and the two receptors in articular chondrocytes, chondrocyte-like cells of meniscus and annulus fibrosus, and chondrocytes of the epiglottis demonstrated that they are all expressed in hyaline, fibrous and elastic cartilaginous tissues, suggesting that they could be involved in cartilage physio-pathology.  相似文献   

17.
High compressive properties of cartilaginous tissues are commonly attributed to the sulfated glycosaminoglycan (GAG) fraction of the extracellular matrix (ECM), but this relationship has not been directly measured in the knee meniscus, which shows regional variation in GAG content. In this study, biopsies from each meniscus region (outer, middle, and inner) were either subjected to chondroitinase ABC (CABC) to remove all sulfated GAGs or not. Compressive testing revealed that GAG depletion in the inner and middle meniscus regions caused a significant decrease in modulus of relaxation (58% and 41% decreases, respectively, at 20% strain), and all regions exhibited a significant decrease in viscosity (outer: 29%; middle: 58%; inner: 62% decrease). Tensile properties following CABC treatment were unaffected for outer and middle meniscus specimens, but the inner meniscus displayed significant increases in Young's modulus (41% increase) and ultimate tensile stress (40% increase) following GAG depletion. These findings suggest that, in the outer meniscus, GAGs contribute to increasing tissue viscosity, whereas in the middle and inner meniscus, where GAGs are most abundant, these molecules also enhance the tissue's ability to withstand compressive loads. GAGs in the inner meniscus also contribute to reducing the circumferential tensile properties of the tissue, perhaps due to the pre-stress on the collagen network from increased hydration of the ECM. Understanding the mechanical role of GAGs in each region of the knee meniscus is important for understanding meniscus structure-function relationships and creating design criteria for functional meniscus tissue engineering efforts.  相似文献   

18.
In this study a scaffoldless approach was employed with two different cell sources and biochemical stimuli to engineer a spectrum of fibrocartilages representative of the different regions of the knee meniscus. Constructs composed of 100% fibrochondrocytes (FC) or a 50:50 co-culture of fibrochondrocytes and chondrocytes (CC) were cultured in 10% fetal bovine serum medium or serum-free "chondrogenic" medium, each +/-10 ng/mL TGF-beta1 (+T). Constructs from these two cell groups and four culture conditions were cultured for 6 weeks. By varying the cell type and presence of the growth factor, GAG per dry weight of the constructs spanned that of native tissue, ranging 16-45% and 1-7% in the CC and FC groups, respectively. Collagen density was most dependent on cell type and was significantly lower than tissue values. The collagen I/II ratio could be manipulated by cell type and serum presence to span the native range, from 3.5 in the serum-free CC group to over 1,000 in the FC groups treated with serum-containing medium. Using the CC cell group in the presence of serum-free medium dramatically increased the compressive stiffness to 128 +/- 34 kPa, similar to native tissue. Similarly, serum-free medium or TGF-beta1 treatment enhanced the tensile modulus by an order of magnitude, up to 3,000 kPa. Using two cell sources and manipulating biochemical stimuli, a range of fibrocartilaginous neotissues was engineered. Fibrocartilages such as the knee meniscus are characterized by heterogeneity in matrix and functional properties, and this work demonstrates a strategy for recreating these heterogeneous tissues.  相似文献   

19.

Introduction

The main objective of this study was to determine whether meniscus cells from the outer (MCO) and inner (MCI) regions of the meniscus interact similarly to or differently with mesenchymal stromal stem cells (MSCs). Previous study had shown that co-culture of meniscus cells with bone marrow-derived MSCs result in enhanced matrix formation relative to mono-cultures of meniscus cells and MSCs. However, the study did not examine if cells from the different regions of the meniscus interacted similarly to or differently with MSCs.

Methods

Human menisci were harvested from four patients undergoing total knee replacements. Tissue from the outer and inner regions represented pieces taken from one third and two thirds of the radial distance of the meniscus, respectively. Meniscus cells were released from the menisci after collagenase treatment. Bone marrow MSCs were obtained from the iliac crest of two patients after plastic adherence and in vitro culture until passage 2. Primary meniscus cells from the outer (MCO) or inner (MCI) regions of the meniscus were co-cultured with MSCs in three-dimensional (3D) pellet cultures at 1:3 ratio, respectively, for 3 weeks in the presence of serum-free chondrogenic medium containing TGF-β1. Mono-cultures of MCO, MCI and MSCs served as experimental control groups. The tissue formed after 3 weeks was assessed biochemically, histochemically and by quantitative RT-PCR.

Results

Co-culture of inner (MCI) or outer (MCO) meniscus cells with MSCs resulted in neo-tissue with increased (up to 2.2-fold) proteoglycan (GAG) matrix content relative to tissues formed from mono-cultures of MSCs, MCI and MCO. Co-cultures of MCI or MCO with MSCs produced the same amount of matrix in the tissue formed. However, the expression level of aggrecan was highest in mono-cultures of MSCs but similar in the other four groups. The DNA content of the tissues from co-cultured cells was not statistically different from tissues formed from mono-cultures of MSCs, MCI and MCO. The expression of collagen I (COL1A2) mRNA increased in co-cultured cells relative to mono-cultures of MCO and MCI but not compared to MSC mono-cultures. Collagen II (COL2A1) mRNA expression increased significantly in co-cultures of both MCO and MCI with MSCs compared to their own controls (mono-cultures of MCO and MCI respectively) but only the co-cultures of MCO:MSCs were significantly increased compared to MSC control mono-cultures. Increased collagen II protein expression was visible by collagen II immuno-histochemistry. The mRNA expression level of Sox9 was similar in all pellet cultures. The expression of collagen × (COL10A1) mRNA was 2-fold higher in co-cultures of MCI:MSCs relative to co-cultures of MCO:MSCs. Additionally, other hypertrophic genes, MMP-13 and Indian Hedgehog (IHh), were highly expressed by 4-fold and 18-fold, respectively, in co-cultures of MCI:MSCs relative to co-cultures of MCO:MSCs.

Conclusions

Co-culture of primary MCI or MCO with MSCs resulted in enhanced matrix formation. MCI and MCO increased matrix formation similarly after co-culture with MSCs. However, MCO was more potent than MCI in suppressing hypertrophic differentiation of MSCs. These findings suggest that meniscus cells from the outer-vascular regions of the meniscus can be supplemented with MSCs in order to engineer functional grafts to reconstruct inner-avascular meniscus.  相似文献   

20.
Cadherins and mechanotransduction by hair cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Mechanotransduction, the conversion of a mechanical stimulus into an electrical signal is crucial for our ability to hear and to maintain balance. Recent findings indicate that two members of the cadherin superfamily are components of the mechanotransduction machinery in sensory hair cells of the vertebrate inner ear. These studies show that cadherin 23 (CDH23) and protocadherin 15 (PCDH15) form several of the extracellular filaments that connect the stereocilia and kinocilium of a hair cell into a bundle. One of these filaments is the tip link that has been proposed to gate the mechanotransduction channel in hair cells. The extracellular domains of CDH23 and PCDH15 differ in their structure from classical cadherins and their cytoplasmic domains bind to distinct effectors, suggesting that evolutionary pressures have shaped the two cadherins for their function in mechanotransduction.  相似文献   

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