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1.
The pericellular matrix of articular cartilage has been shown to regulate the mechanical environment of chondrocytes. However, little is known about the mechanical role of collagen fibrils in the pericellular matrix, and how fibrils might help modulate strains acting on chondrocytes when cartilage is loaded. The primary objective was to clarify the effect of pericellular collagen fibrils on cell volume changes and strains during cartilage loading. Secondary objectives were to investigate the effects of pericellular fixed charges and fluid on cell responses. A microstructural model of articular cartilage, in which chondrocytes and pericellular matrices were represented with depth-dependent structural and morphological properties, was created. The extracellular matrix and pericellular matrices were modeled as fibril-reinforced, biphasic materials with swelling capabilities, while chondrocytes were assumed to be isotropic and biphasic with swelling properties. Collagen fibrils in the extracellular matrix were represented with an arcade-like architecture, whereas pericellular fibrils were assumed to run tangential to the cell surface. In the early stages of a stress-relaxation test, pericellular fibrils were found to sensitively affect cell volume changes, even producing a reversal from increasing to decreasing cell volume with increasing fibril stiffness in the superficial zone. Consequently, steady-state volume of the superficial zone cell decreased with increasing pericellular fibril stiffness. Volume changes in the middle and deep zone chondrocytes were smaller and opposite to those observed in the superficial zone chondrocyte. An increase in the pericellular fixed charge density reduced cell volumes substantially in every zone. The sensitivity of cell volume changes to pericellular fibril stiffness suggests that pericellular fibrils play an important, and as of yet largely neglected, role in regulating the mechanical environment of chondrocytes, possibly affecting matrix synthesis during cartilage development and degeneration, and affecting biosynthetic responses associated with articular cartilage loading.  相似文献   

2.
Recent studies have reported that certain regimes of compressive loading of articular cartilage result in increased cell death in the superficial tangential zone (STZ). The objectives of this study were (1) to test the prevalent hypothesis that preferential cell death in the STZ results from excessive compressive strain in that zone, relative to the middle and deep zones, by determining whether cell death correlates with the magnitude of compressive strain and (2) to test the corollary hypothesis that the viability response of cells is uniform through the thickness of the articular layer when exposed to the same loading environment. Live cartilage explants were statically compressed by approximately 65% of their original thickness, either normal to the articular surface (axial loading) or parallel to it (transverse loading). Cell viability after 12 h was compared to the local strain distribution measured by digital image correlation. Results showed that the strain distribution in the axially loaded samples was highest in the STZ (77%) and lowest in the deep zone (55%), whereas the strain was uniformly distributed in the transversely loaded samples (64%). In contrast, axially and transversely loaded samples exhibited very similar profiles of cell death through the depth, with a preferential distribution in the STZ. Unloaded control samples showed negligible cell death. Thus, under prolonged static loading, depth-dependent variations in chondrocyte death did not correlate with the local depth-dependent compressive strain, and the prevalent hypothesis must be rejected. An alternative hypothesis, suggested by these results, is that superficial zone chondrocytes are more vulnerable to prolonged static loading than chondrocytes in the middle and deep zones.  相似文献   

3.
The collagen network and proteoglycan matrix of articular cartilage are thought to play an important role in controlling the stresses and strains in and around chondrocytes, in regulating the biosynthesis of the solid matrix, and consequently in maintaining the health of diarthrodial joints. Understanding the detailed effects of the mechanical environment of chondrocytes on cell behavior is therefore essential for the study of the development, adaptation, and degeneration of articular cartilage. Recent progress in macroscopic models has improved our understanding of depth-dependent properties of cartilage. However, none of the previous works considered the effect of realistic collagen orientation or depth-dependent negative charges in microscopic models of chondrocyte mechanics. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of the collagen network and fixed charge densities of cartilage on the mechanical environment of the chondrocytes in a depth-dependent manner. We developed an anisotropic, inhomogeneous, microstructural fibril-reinforced finite element model of articular cartilage for application in unconfined compression. The model consisted of the extracellular matrix and chondrocytes located in the superficial, middle, and deep zones. Chondrocytes were surrounded by a pericellular matrix and were assumed spherical prior to tissue swelling and load application. Material properties of the chondrocytes, pericellular matrix, and extracellular matrix were obtained from the literature. The loading protocol included a free swelling step followed by a stress-relaxation step. Results from traditional isotropic and transversely isotropic biphasic models were used for comparison with predictions from the current model. In the superficial zone, cell shapes changed from rounded to elliptic after free swelling. The stresses and strains as well as fluid flow in cells were greatly affected by the modulus of the collagen network. The fixed charge density of the chondrocytes, pericellular matrix, and extracellular matrix primarily affected the aspect ratios (height/width) and the solid matrix stresses of cells. The mechanical responses of the cells were strongly location and time dependent. The current model highlights that the collagen orientation and the depth-dependent negative fixed charge densities of articular cartilage have a great effect in modulating the mechanical environment in the vicinity of chondrocytes, and it provides an important improvement over earlier models in describing the possible pathways from loading of articular cartilage to the mechanical and biological responses of chondrocytes.  相似文献   

4.
Morel V  Quinn TM 《Biorheology》2004,41(3-4):509-519
The short-term responses of articular cartilage to mechanical injury have important implications for prevention and treatment of degenerative disease. Cell and matrix responses were monitored for 11 days following injurious compression of cartilage in osteochondral explants. Injury was applied as a single ramp compression to 14 MPa peak stress at one of three strain rates: 7 x 10(-1), 7 x 10(-3) or 7 x 10(-5) s(-1). Responses were quantified in terms of the appearance of macroscopic matrix cracks, changes in cell viability, and changes in cartilage wet weights. Loading at the highest strain rate resulted in acute cell death near the superficial zone in association with cracks, followed over the 11 days after compression by a gradual increase in cell death and loss of demarcation between matrix zones containing viable versus nonviable cells. In contrast, loading at the lowest strain rate resulted in more severe, nearly full-depth cell death acutely, but with no apparent worsening over the 11 days following compression. Between days 4 and 11, all mechanically injured explants significantly increased in wet weight, suggesting loss of matrix mechanical integrity independent of compression strain rate. Results demonstrate that short-term responses of cartilage depend upon the biomechanical characteristics of injurious loading, and suggest multiple independent pathways of mechanically-induced cell death and matrix degradation. Modifications to an existing fiber-reinforced poroelastic finite element model were introduced and the model was used for data interpretation and identification of microphysical events involved in cell and matrix injury. The model performed reasonably well at the slower strain rates and exhibited some capacity for anticipating the formation of superficial cracks during injurious loading. However, several improvements appear to be necessary before such a model could reliably be used to draw upon in vitro experimental results for prediction of injurious loading situations in vivo.  相似文献   

5.
Lee DA  Noguchi T  Frean SP  Lees P  Bader DL 《Biorheology》2000,37(1-2):149-161
Articular cartilage is subjected to dynamic compressive loading during normal activity which influences chondrocyte metabolism through various mechanotransduction pathways. A well characterised and reproducible model system, involving chondrocytes embedded in agarose gel, has been used to investigate the effects of mechanical compression on chondrocytes, isolated from full depth cartilage or separately from the superficial and deep zone tissue. The role of nitric oxide as a mediator of mechanical-induced effects has also been studied. Chondrocytes were isolated, separately, from full depth, superficial and deep zone cartilage and seeded in 3% agarose constructs. Dynamic compressive strain was applied to the constructs using a range of frequencies (0.3, 1 and 3 Hz). Glycosaminoglycan synthesis, cell proliferation and nitrite production were assessed. In further experiments, constructs were compressed in the presence of 1 mM L-NAME or 10 microM dexamethasone. Glycosaminoglycan synthesis by full depth chondrocytes was affected by compressive strain in a frequency dependent manner. Dynamic strain at all frequencies induced an increase in [3H]-thymidine incorporation. Glycosaminoglycan synthesis by deep zone cells was affected by the strain regimes in a similar fashion to full depth cells, while superficial cells exhibited a similar proliferative response to full depth cells. Dynamic compression inhibited nitrite production, the effect being reversed by L-NAME. Compression induced stimulation of [3H]-TdR incorporation was reversed by L-NAME. These studies demonstrate that glycosaminoglycan synthesis and proliferation are influenced by the dynamic strain regimes in a distinct manner. Indeed the data suggest that these processes occur in different chondrocyte sub-populations. It may be speculated that nitric oxide acts as a mediator of mechanotransduction processes affecting proliferation primarily in the superficial cell sub-population.  相似文献   

6.
The pericellular matrix (PCM) is a narrow region of tissue that completely surrounds chondrocytes in articular cartilage. Previous theoretical models of the "chondron" (the PCM with enclosed cells) suggest that the structure and properties of the PCM may significantly influence the mechanical environment of the chondrocyte. The objective of this study was to quantify changes in the three-dimensional (3D) morphology of the chondron in situ at different magnitudes of compression applied to the cartilage extracellular matrix. Fluorescence immunolabeling for type-VI collagen was used to identify the boundaries of the cell and PCM, and confocal microscopy was used to form 3D images of chondrons from superficial, middle, and deep zone cartilage in explants compressed to 0%, 10%, 30%, and 50% surface-to-surface strain. Lagrangian tissue strain, determined locally using texture correlation, was highly inhomogeneous and revealed depth-dependent compressive stiffness and Poisson's ratio of the extracellular matrix. Compression significantly decreased cell and chondron height and volume, depending on the zone and magnitude of compression. In the superficial zone, cellular-level strains were always lower than tissue-level strains. In the middle and deep zones, however, tissue strains below 25% were amplified at the cellular level, while tissue strains above 25% were decreased at the cellular level. These findings are consistent with previous theoretical models of the chondron, suggesting that the PCM can serve as either a protective layer for the chondrocyte or a transducer that amplifies strain, such that cellular-level strains are more homogenous throughout the tissue depth despite large inhomogeneities in local ECM strains.  相似文献   

7.
Sibole SC  Erdemir A 《PloS one》2012,7(5):e37538
Cells of the musculoskeletal system are known to respond to mechanical loading and chondrocytes within the cartilage are not an exception. However, understanding how joint level loads relate to cell level deformations, e.g. in the cartilage, is not a straightforward task. In this study, a multi-scale analysis pipeline was implemented to post-process the results of a macro-scale finite element (FE) tibiofemoral joint model to provide joint mechanics based displacement boundary conditions to micro-scale cellular FE models of the cartilage, for the purpose of characterizing chondrocyte deformations in relation to tibiofemoral joint loading. It was possible to identify the load distribution within the knee among its tissue structures and ultimately within the cartilage among its extracellular matrix, pericellular environment and resident chondrocytes. Various cellular deformation metrics (aspect ratio change, volumetric strain, cellular effective strain and maximum shear strain) were calculated. To illustrate further utility of this multi-scale modeling pipeline, two micro-scale cartilage constructs were considered: an idealized single cell at the centroid of a 100×100×100 μm block commonly used in past research studies, and an anatomically based (11 cell model of the same volume) representation of the middle zone of tibiofemoral cartilage. In both cases, chondrocytes experienced amplified deformations compared to those at the macro-scale, predicted by simulating one body weight compressive loading on the tibiofemoral joint. In the 11 cell case, all cells experienced less deformation than the single cell case, and also exhibited a larger variance in deformation compared to other cells residing in the same block. The coupling method proved to be highly scalable due to micro-scale model independence that allowed for exploitation of distributed memory computing architecture. The method's generalized nature also allows for substitution of any macro-scale and/or micro-scale model providing application for other multi-scale continuum mechanics problems.  相似文献   

8.
Impact loading of articular cartilage causes extensive chondrocyte death. Cell membranes have a limited elastic range of 3–4% strain but are protected from direct stretch during physiological loading by their membrane reservoir, an intricate pattern of membrane folds. Using a finite-element model, we suggested previously that access to the membrane reservoir is strain-rate-dependent and that during impact loading, the accessible membrane reservoir is drastically decreased, so that strains applied to chondrocytes are directly transferred to cell membranes, which fail when strains exceed 3–4%. However, experimental support for this proposal is lacking. The purpose of this study was to measure the accessible membrane reservoir size for different membrane strain rates using membrane tethering techniques with atomic force microscopy. We conducted atomic force spectroscopy on isolated chondrocytes (n = 87). A micron-sized cantilever was used to extract membrane tethers from cell surfaces at constant pulling rates. Membrane tethers could be identified as force plateaus in the resulting force-displacement curves. Six pulling rates were tested (1, 5, 10, 20, 40, and 80 μm/s). The size of the membrane reservoir, represented by the membrane tether surface areas, decreased exponentially with increasing pulling rates. The current results support our theoretical findings that chondrocytes exposed to impact loading die because of membrane ruptures caused by high tensile membrane strain rates.  相似文献   

9.
Osteoarthritis (OA) is a joint disease characterized by cartilage degeneration, a thickening of subchondral bone, and formation of marginal osteophytes. Previous mechanical characterization of cartilage in our laboratory suggests that energy storage and dissipation is reduced in osteoarthritis as the extent of fibrillation and fissure formation increases. It is not clear whether the loss of energy storage and dissipation characteristics is a result of biochemical and/or biophysical changes that occur to hyaline cartilage in joints. The purpose of this study is to present data, on the strain rate dependence of the elastic and viscous behaviors of cartilage, in order to further characterize changes that occur in the mechanical properties that are associated with OA. We have previously hypothesized that the changes seen in the mechanical properties of cartilage may be due to altered mechanochemical transduction by chondrocytes. Results of incremental tensile stress-strain tests at strain rates between 100%/min and 10,000%/min conducted on OA cartilage indicate that the slope of the elastic stress-strain curve increases with increasing strain rate, unlike the reported behavior of skin and self-assembled collagen fibers. It is suggested that the strain-rate dependence of the elastic stress-strain curve is due to the presence of large quantities of proteoglycans (PGs), which protect articular cartilage by increasing the apparent stiffness. The increased apparent stiffness of articular cartilage at high strain rates may limit the stresses borne and prolong the onset of OA. It is further hypothesized that increased compressive loading of chondrocytes in the intermediate zone of articular cartilage occurs as a result of normal wear to the superficial zone or from excessive impact loading. Once the superficial zone of articular cartilage is worn away, the tension is decreased throughout all cartilage zones leading to increased chondrocyte compressive loading and up-regulation of mechanochemical transduction processes that elaborate catabolic enzymes.  相似文献   

10.
Impact loading of articular cartilage causes extensive chondrocyte death. Cell membranes have a limited elastic range of 3–4% strain but are protected from direct stretch during physiological loading by their membrane reservoir, an intricate pattern of membrane folds. Using a finite-element model, we suggested previously that access to the membrane reservoir is strain-rate-dependent and that during impact loading, the accessible membrane reservoir is drastically decreased, so that strains applied to chondrocytes are directly transferred to cell membranes, which fail when strains exceed 3–4%. However, experimental support for this proposal is lacking. The purpose of this study was to measure the accessible membrane reservoir size for different membrane strain rates using membrane tethering techniques with atomic force microscopy. We conducted atomic force spectroscopy on isolated chondrocytes (n = 87). A micron-sized cantilever was used to extract membrane tethers from cell surfaces at constant pulling rates. Membrane tethers could be identified as force plateaus in the resulting force-displacement curves. Six pulling rates were tested (1, 5, 10, 20, 40, and 80 μm/s). The size of the membrane reservoir, represented by the membrane tether surface areas, decreased exponentially with increasing pulling rates. The current results support our theoretical findings that chondrocytes exposed to impact loading die because of membrane ruptures caused by high tensile membrane strain rates.  相似文献   

11.
In this study, we demonstrate that articular cartilage chondrocytes are surrounded by the defining basement membrane proteins laminin, collagen type IV, nidogen and perlecan, and suggest that these form the functional equivalent of a basement membrane. We found by real-time PCR that mouse chondrocytes express these four cardinal components of basement membranes and demonstrated by immunohistochemistry that the proteins are present in bovine and mouse cartilage tissues and are deposited in a thin pericellular structure. Immunoelectron microscopy confirmed high laminin concentration in the pericellular matrix. In cartilage from newborn mice, basement membrane components are widespread in the territorial and interterritorial matrix, while in mature cartilage of adult mice the basement membrane components are localized mainly to a narrow pericellular zone. With progression into old age, this layer becomes less distinct, especially in areas of obvious mechanical attrition. Interestingly, individual laminin subunits were located in different zones of the cartilage, with laminin alpha1 showing preferential localization around a select population of superficial layer chondrocytes. We propose that the chondrocyte, like several other cell types of mesenchymal origin, is surrounded by the functional equivalent of a basement membrane. This structure is presumably involved in maintaining chondrocyte phenotype and viability and may well allow a new understanding of cartilage development and provide clues to the progression of degenerative joint disorders.  相似文献   

12.
The biomechanical response of articular cartilage to a wide range of impact loading rates was investigated for stress magnitudes that exist during joint trauma. Viable, intact bovine cartilage explants were impacted in confined compression with stress rates of 25, 50, 130 and 1000 MPa/s and stress magnitudes of 10, 20, 30 and 40 MPa. Water loss, cell viability, dynamic impact modulus (DIM) and matrix deformation were measured. Under all loading conditions the water loss was small (approximately 15%); water loss increased linearly with increasing peak stress and decreased exponentially with increasing stress rate. Cell death was localized within the superficial zone (< or =12% of total tissue thickness); the depth of cell death from the articular surface increased with peak stress and decreased with increasing stress rate. The DIM increased (200-700 MPa) and matrix deformation decreased with increasing stress rate. Initial water and proteoglycan (PG) content had a weak, yet significant influence on water loss, cell death and DIM. However, the significance of the inhomogeneous structure and composition of the cartilage matrix was accentuated when explants impacted on the deep zone had less water loss and matrix deformation, higher DIM, and no cell death compared to explants impacted on the articular surface. The mechano-biological response of articular cartilage depended on magnitude and rate of impact loading.  相似文献   

13.
The integrity of articular cartilage depends on the proper functioning and mechanical stimulation of chondrocytes, the cells that synthesize extracellular matrix and maintain tissue health. The biosynthetic activity of chondrocytes is influenced by genetic factors, environmental influences, extracellular matrix composition, and mechanical factors. The mechanical environment of chondrocytes is believed to be an important determinant for joint health, and chondrocyte deformation in response to mechanical loading is speculated to be an important regulator of metabolic activity. In previous studies of chondrocyte deformation, articular cartilage was described as a biphasic material consisting of a homogeneous, isotropic, linearly elastic solid phase, and an inviscid fluid phase. However, articular cartilage is known to be anisotropic and inhomogeneous across its depth. Therefore, isotropic and homogeneous models cannot make appropriate predictions for tissue and cell stresses and strains. Here, we modelled articular cartilage as a transversely isotropic, inhomogeneous (TI) material in which the anisotropy and inhomogeneity arose naturally from the microstructure of the depth-dependent collagen fibril orientation and volumetric fraction, as well as the chondrocyte shape and volumetric fraction. The purpose of this study was to analyse the deformation behaviour of chondrocytes using the TI model of articular cartilage. In order to evaluate our model against experimental results, we simulated indentation and unconfined compression tests for nominal compressions of 15%. Chondrocyte deformations were analysed as a function of location within the tissue. The TI model predicted a non-uniform behaviour across tissue depth: in indentation testing, cell height decreased by 43% in the superficial zone and between 11 and 29% in the deep zone. In unconfined compression testing, cell height decreased by 32% in the superficial zone, 25% in the middle, and 18% in the deep zones. This predicted non-uniformity is in agreement with experimental studies. The novelty of this study is the use of a cartilage material model accounting for the intrinsic inhomogeneity and anisotropy of cartilage caused by its microstructure.  相似文献   

14.
Identification of progenitor/stem cell populations that differentiate specifically towards superficial zone articular chondrocytes is an unmet challenge for cartilage tissue engineering. Using fluorescence activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis we found a characteristic pattern of "side population" (SP) stem cells identified by the Hoechst 33342 dye. We established micromass cultures from this population of cells and tested their chondrogeneic potential. Control (untreated) cultures were minimally stained for Alcian blue - a marker of chondrogenesis. However, with BMP-7 treatment, Alcian blue staining was increased. Superficial zone protein - a specific marker for articular cartilage superficial zone chondrocytes - increased with BMP-7 and/or TGF-beta1 treatment in SP micromass cultures. Our results demonstrate the presence of stem/progenitor cells in the SP fraction isolated from the surface zone of bovine cartilage and have the ability to specifically differentiate towards the superficial zone articular chondrocyte.  相似文献   

15.
Hyaluronan (HA) plays an essential role in cartilage where it functions to retain aggrecan. Previous studies have suggested that aggrecan is anchored indirectly to the plasma membrane of chondrocytes via its binding to cell-associated HA. However, reagents used to test these observations such as hyaluronidase and HA oligosaccharides are short term and may have side activities that complicate interpretation. Using the CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing approach, a model system was developed by generating HA-deficient chondrocyte cell lines. HA synthase-2 (Has2)-specific single guide RNA was introduced into two different variant lines of rat chondrosarcoma chondrocytes; knockout clones were isolated and characterized. Two other members of the HA synthase gene family were expressed at very low relative copy number but showed no compensatory response in the Has2 knockouts. Wild type chondrocytes of both variants exhibited large pericellular matrices or coats extending from the plasma membrane. Addition of purified aggrecan monomer expanded the size of these coats as the proteoglycan became retained within the pericellular matrix. Has2 knockout chondrocytes lost all capacity to assemble a particle-excluding pericellular matrix and more importantly, no matrices formed around the knockout cells following the addition of purified aggrecan. When grown as pellet cultures so as to generate a bioengineered neocartilage tissue, the Has2 knockout chondrocytes assumed a tightly-compacted morphology as compared to the wild type cells. When knockout chondrocytes were transduced with Adeno-ZsGreen1-mycHas2, the cell-associated pericellular matrices were restored including the capacity to bind and incorporate additional exogenous aggrecan into the matrix. These results suggest that HA is essential for aggrecan retention and maintaining cell separation during tissue formation.  相似文献   

16.
Articular cartilage contains four distinct zones, extending from the surface to the subchondral bone. Freshly isolated chondrocytes from the superficial zone of articular cartilage retain a collagenase-P-resistant cell-associated matrix. In the studies described here, the protein Del1 was identified as a component of the cell-associated matrix of superficial zone chondrocytes from adult bovine articular cartilage. Very little Del1 was associated with freshly isolated deep zone chondrocytes. Western blot analysis of articular cartilage cell and tissue extracts using polyclonal antibodies specific for Del1 showed Del1 was present in an insoluble cell-associated fraction. Extracts of the superficial zone of articular cartilage were found to be enriched in Del1 compared to the deeper layers of the tissue. Immunohistochemical staining of full-thickness articular cartilage with anti-Del1 antibodies also showed an enrichment of Del1 in the superficial zone. These observations are the first to describe the protein Del1 in a nonendothelial, nonfetal tissue.  相似文献   

17.
Physiological loading of articulating joints is necessary for normal cartilage function. However, conditions of excessive overloading or trauma can cause cartilage injury resulting in matrix damage and cell death. The objective of this study was to evaluate chondrocyte viability within mechanically compressed articular cartilage removed from immature and mature bovine knees. Twenty-three mature and 68 immature cartilage specimens were subjected to static uniaxial confined-creep compressions of 0–70% and the extent of cell death was measured using fluorescent microscopic imaging. In both age groups, cell death was always initiated at the articular surface and increased linearly in depth with increasing strain magnitude. However, most of the cell death was localized within the superficial zone (SZ) of the cartilage matrix with the depth never greater than ~ 500 μm or 25% of the thickness of the test specimen. The immature cartilage was found to have a significantly greater (> 2 times) amount (depth) of cell death compared to the mature cartilage, especially at the higher strains. This finding was attributed to the lower compressive modulus of the immature cartilage in the SZ compared to that of the mature cartilage, resulting in a greater local matrix strain and concomitant cell surface membrane strain in this zone when the matrix was compressed. These results provide further insight into the capacity of articular cartilage in different age groups to resist the severity of traumatic injury from compressive loads.  相似文献   

18.
The cryopreservation of articular cartilage chondrocytes has been achieved with cells isolated from the cartilage matrix but has found only limited success when the tissue is left intact. Previous work with ovine cartilage has shown that cryopreservation of the chondrocytes of the superficial and deep zones is possible, but the cells of the intermediate zone have not been successfully cryopreserved. This finding led to the suggestion that there might be biological differences between chondrocytes of the different morphological zones that were responsible for this differential recovery. This study investigates the hypothesis that the cells of the intermediate zone are more sensitive to cryoinjury by introducing cuts in the cartilage so that cells of the intermediate zone have the same proximity to the outer surface of the tissue as the cells of the superficial zone. When this was done, it was found that cells of the intermediate zone could survive cryopreservation as well as the cells of the superficial zone when they were near a surface, but not when they were embedded deep within the tissue. Thus the hypothesis of a biological difference between the cells of the two zones being responsible for the differential recovery is disproved. It is further hypothesized that physical proximity to a surface leads to higher recovery as a result of planar ice growth into the cartilage.  相似文献   

19.
The morphology of head cartilage of the cephalopods Sepia officinalis and Octopus vulgaris has been studied on samples fixed and embedded for light- and electron microscopy and on fresh frozen sections viewed by polarizing microscopy. The organization of extracellular matrix (ECM) varies in different regions of the head cartilage. Superficial zones are made up of densely packed collagenous laminae parallel to the cartilage surface, while radially arranged laminae form a deeper zone where territorial and interterritorial areas are present. A compact arrangement of banded collagen fibrils (10-25 nm in diameter) forms the laminae of the superficial zones and of the interterritorial areas; a loose three-dimensional network of fibrils (10-20 nm) with many proteoglycan aggregates forms the territorial areas. A pericellular matrix surrounds the bodies of extremely branched territorial chondrocytes. Peculiar anchoring devices (ADs) are dispersed with variable orientation within the ECM. A perichondrium is present, but often connectival and muscular bundles are fused with the superficial layers of cartilage. Some vessels were also observed within the superficial inner zone and clusters of hemocyanin molecules were demonstrated both in the ECM and in some cells. The cephalopod head cartilage seems to share some morphological characteristics with both hyaline cartilage and bone tissue of vertebrates.  相似文献   

20.
The present study focused on the hypertrophic cell zone and the adjacent region of primary spongiosa in the mandibular condylar cartilage in growing rats (3 to 7 weeks old). In this cartilage, chondrocytes were not arranged in columns, and there was no clear distinction between longitudinal and transverse septum. The hypertrophic chondrocytes were not surrounded entirely by calcified matrix, and capillaries were in close contact with cartilage cells. The staining intensity of the pericellular matrix decreased in the lower hypertrophic cell zone in comparison with that in the upper part of the hypertrophic cell zone. Electron microscopic examinations indicated that the lowest hypertrophic cells contained lysosomes and pinocytotic vesicles. Some hypertrophic chondrocytes appeared to have been released from their lacunae and were observed in the region of the primary spongiosa. Hence it is suggested that the lowest hypertrophic chondrocytes in the rat mandibular condyle do not die but are released from their lacunae into the bone marrow. Further study is needed to determine whether or not these cells do indeed become osteoblasts and/or chondroclasts.  相似文献   

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