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1.
Primary cilia are slender, microtubule based structures found in the majority of cell types with one cilium per cell. In articular cartilage, primary cilia are required for chondrocyte mechanotransduction and the development of healthy tissue. Loss of primary cilia in Col2aCre;ift88fl/fl transgenic mice results in up-regulation of osteoarthritic (OA) markers and development of OA like cartilage with greater thickness and reduced mechanical stiffness. However no previous studies have examined whether loss of primary cilia influences the intrinsic mechanical properties of articular cartilage matrix in the form of the modulus or just the structural properties of the tissue. The present study describes a modified analytical model to derive the viscoelastic moduli based on previous experimental indentation data. Results show that the increased thickness of the articular cartilage in the Col2aCre;ift88fl/fl transgenic mice is associated with a reduction in both the instantaneous and equilibrium moduli at indentation strains of greater than 20%. This reveals that the loss of primary cilia causes a significant reduction in the mechanical properties of cartilage particularly in the deeper zones and possibly the underlying bone. This is consistent with histological analysis and confirms the importance of primary cilia in the development of a mechanically functional articular cartilage.  相似文献   

2.
Collagen degradation is one of the early signs of osteoarthritis. It is not known how collagen degradation affects chondrocyte volume and morphology. Thus, the aim of this study was to investigate the effect of enzymatically induced collagen degradation on cell volume and shape changes in articular cartilage after a hypotonic challenge. Confocal laser scanning microscopy was used for imaging superficial zone chondrocytes in intact and degraded cartilage exposed to a hypotonic challenge. Fourier transform infrared microspectroscopy, polarized light microscopy, and mechanical testing were used to quantify differences in proteoglycan and collagen content, collagen orientation, and biomechanical properties, respectively, between the intact and degraded cartilage. Collagen content decreased and collagen orientation angle increased significantly (p < 0.05) in the superficial zone cartilage after collagenase treatment, and the instantaneous modulus of the samples was reduced significantly (p < 0.05). Normalized cell volume and height 20 min after the osmotic challenge (with respect to the original volume and height) were significantly (p < 0.001 and p < 0.01, respectively) larger in the intact compared to the degraded cartilage. These findings suggest that the mechanical environment of chondrocytes, specifically collagen content and orientation, affects cell volume and shape changes in the superficial zone articular cartilage when exposed to osmotic loading. This emphasizes the role of collagen in modulating cartilage mechanobiology in diseased tissue.  相似文献   

3.
A bovine cartilage explant system was used to evaluate the effects of injurious compression on chondrocyte apoptosis and matrix biochemical and biomechanical properties within intact cartilage. Disks of newborn bovine articular cartilage were compressed in vitro to various peak stress levels and chondrocyte apoptotic cell death, tissue biomechanical properties, tissue swelling, glycosaminoglycan loss, and nitrite levels were quantified. Chondrocyte apoptosis occurred at peak stresses as low as 4.5 MPa and increased with peak stress in a dose-dependent manner. This increase in apoptosis was maximal by 24 h after the termination of the loading protocol. At high peak stresses (>20 MPa), greater than 50% of cells apoptosed. When measured in uniaxial confined compression, the equilibrium and dynamic stiffness of explants decreased with the severity of injurious load, although this trend was not significant until 24-MPa peak stress. In contrast, the equilibrium and dynamic stiffness measured in radially unconfined compression decreased significantly after injurious stresses of 12 and 7 MPa, respectively. Together, these results suggested that injurious compression caused a degradation of the collagen fibril network in the 7- to 12-MPa range. Consistent with this hypothesis, injurious compression caused a dose-dependent increase in tissue swelling, significant by 13-MPa peak stress. Glycosaminoglycans were also released from the cartilage in a dose-dependent manner, significant by 6- to 13-MPa peak stress. Nitrite levels were significantly increased above controls at 20-MPa peak stress. Together, these data suggest that injurious compression can stimulate cell death as well as a range of biomechanical and biochemical alterations to the matrix and, possibly, chondrocyte nitric oxide expression. Interestingly, chondrocyte programmed cell death appears to take place at stresses lower than those required to stimulate cartilage matrix degradation and biomechanical changes. While chondrocyte apoptosis may therefore be one of the earliest responses to tissue injury, it is currently unclear whether this initial cellular response subsequently drives cartilage matrix degradation and changes in the biomechanical properties of the tissue.  相似文献   

4.
Blain EJ  Mason DJ  Duance VC 《Biorheology》2003,40(1-3):111-117
Osteoarthritis (OA) develops as a consequence of articular cartilage degeneration possibly initiated by excessive or abnormal loading of the joint, and potentially mediated through a proteinase/proteinase inhibitor imbalance. We have shown previously that physiological loads (0.5 MPa, 1 Hz, 3 hour) elicit increased expression and activation of the matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) in articular cartilage explants in vitro. The objective of this study was to identify mechanically-regulated genes involved in the observed induction of MMP expression and enhanced activation. Differential RNA Display (DRD) was used to identify mechanically-regulated genes by comparing DRD products derived from loaded and unloaded cartilage. One gene up-regulated in cartilage after 10, 30 and 60 minute loading revealed 83% homology with Mus musculus thymosin beta_4 which is known to induce MMP gene expression. The identification of mechanically regulated genes will greatly enhance our understanding of matrix turnover providing an exciting future in elucidating the role of mechanically-regulated genes in the development of OA.  相似文献   

5.
The objective of this study was to assess mechano-biological response of articular cartilage when subjected to a single impact stress. Mature bovine cartilage explants were impacted with peak stresses ranging from 10 to 60 MPa at a stress rate of 350 MPa/s. Water loss, matrix axial deformation, dynamic impact modulus (DIM), and cell viability were measured immediately after impaction. The water loss through the articular surface (AS) was small and ranged from 1% to 6% with increasing peak stress. The corresponding axial strains ranged from 2.5% to 25%, respectively, while the DIM was 455.9 +/- 111.9 MPa. Chondrocyte death started at the articular surface and increased in depth to a maximum of 6% (70 microns) of the cartilage thickness at the highest stress. We found that the volumetric (axial) strain was more than twice the amount of water loss at the highest peak stress. Furthermore, specimens impacted such that the interstitial water was forced through the deep zone (DZ) had less water loss, a higher DIM, and no cell death. These findings appear to be due to matrix compaction in the superficial region causing higher compressive strains to occur at the surface rather than in the deeper zones.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
The addition of retinoic acid to adult bovine articular cartilage cultures produces a concentration-dependent decrease in both proteoglycan synthesis and the proteoglycan content of the tissue. Total protein synthesis was not affected by the presence of retinoic acid, indicating that the inhibition of proteoglycan synthesis was not due to cytotoxicity. The proteoglycans synthesized in the presence of retinoic acid were similar in hydrodynamic size, ability to form aggregates with hyaluronate, and glycosaminoglycan composition to those of control cultures. However, the presence of larger glycosaminoglycan chains suggests that the core protein was substituted with fewer but longer glycosaminoglycan chains. In cultures maintained with retinoic acid, a decreased ratio of the large proteoglycan was synthesized relative to the small proteoglycan compared to that measured in control cultures. In cultures maintained with retinoic acid for 1 day and then switched to medium with 20% (v/v) fetal calf serum, the rate of proteoglycan synthesis and hexuronate contents increased within 5 days to levels near those of control cultures. Within 2 days of switching to medium with 20% (v/v) fetal calf serum, the relative proportions of the proteoglycan species were similar to those produced in cultures maintained in medium with 20% (v/v) fetal calf serum throughout. The rate of proteoglycan synthesis by bovine articular cartilage cultures exhibited an exponential decay following exposure to retinoic acid, with estimated half-lives of 11.5 and 5.3 h for tissue previously maintained in medium alone or containing 20% (v/v) fetal calf serum, respectively. The addition of 1 mM benzyl beta-D-xyloside only partially reversed the retinoic acid-mediated inhibition of proteoglycan synthesis. This indicates that the inhibition of proteoglycan synthesis by retinoic acid was due to both a decreased availability of xylosylated core protein and a decreased capacity of the chondrocytes to synthesize chondroitin sulfate chains.  相似文献   

8.
This paper describes proteoglycan catabolism by adult bovine articular cartilage treated with retinoic acid as a means of stimulating the loss of this macromolecule from the extracellular matrix of cartilage. Addition of retinoic acid (10(-12)-10(-6) M) to adult bovine articular cartilage which had been labeled with [35S]sulfate for 6 h after 5 days in culture, resulted in a dose-dependent increase in the rate of loss of 35S-labeled proteoglycans from the matrix of the tissue. Concomitant with this loss was a decrease in the proteoglycan content of the tissue. Incubation of cultures treated with 1 microM retinoic acid, at 4 degrees C, or with 0.5 mM cycloheximide, resulted in a significant decrease in the rate of retinoic acid-induced loss of proteoglycans and demonstrated cellular involvement in this process. Analysis of the 35S-labeled proteoglycans remaining in the matrix showed that the percentage of radioactivity associated with the small proteoglycan species extracted from the matrix of articular cartilage explants labeled with [35S]sulfate after 5 days in culture was 15% and this increased to 22% in tissue maintained in medium alone. In tissue treated with 1 microM retinoic acid for 6 days, the percentage of radioactivity associated with the small proteoglycan was 58%. Approximately 93% of the 35S-labeled proteoglycans released into the medium of control and retinoic acid-treated cultures was recovered in high density fractions after CsCl gradient centrifugation and eluted on Sepharose CL-2B as a broad peak with a Kav of 0.30-0.37. Less than 17% of these proteoglycans was capable of aggregating with hyaluronate. These results indicate that in both control and retinoic acid-treated cultures the larger proteoglycan species is lost to the medium at a greater rate than the small proteoglycan species. The effect of retinoic acid on proteoglycan turnover was shown to be reversible. Cartilage cultures maintained with retinoic acid for 1 day then switched to medium with 20% (v/v) fetal calf serum for the remainder of the culture period exhibited decreased rates of loss of 35S-labeled proteoglycans from the matrix and increased tissue hexuronate contents to levels near those observed in tissue maintained in medium with 20% (v/v) fetal calf serum throughout. Furthermore, following switching to 20% (v/v) fetal calf serum, the relative proportions of the 35S-labeled proteoglycan species remaining in the matrix of these cultures were similar to those of control cultures.  相似文献   

9.
Mechanical compression of the cartilage extracellular matrix has a significant effect on the metabolic activity of the chondrocytes. However, the relationship between the stress–strain and fluid-flow fields at the macroscopic “tissue” level and those at the microscopic “cellular” level are not fully understood. Based on the existing experimental data on the deformation behavior and biomechanical properties of articular cartilage and chondrocytes, a multi-scale biphasic finite element model was developed of the chondrocyte as a spheroidal inclusion embedded within the extracellular matrix of a cartilage explant. The mechanical environment at the cellular level was found to be time-varying and inhomogeneous, and the large difference (3 orders of magnitude) in the elastic properties of the chondrocyte and those of the extracellular matrix results in stress concentrations at the cell–matrix border and a nearly two-fold increase in strain and dilatation (volume change) at the cellular level, as compared to the macroscopic level. The presence of a narrow “pericellular matrix” with different properties than that of the chondrocyte or extracellular matrix significantly altered the principal stress and strain magnitudes within the chondrocyte, suggesting a functional biomechanical role for the pericellular matrix. These findings suggest that even under simple compressive loading conditions, chondrocytes are subjected to a complex local mechanical environment consisting of tension, compression, shear, and fluid pressure. Knowledge of the local stress and strain fields in the extracellular matrix is an important step in the interpretation of studies of mechanical signal transduction in cartilage explant culture models.  相似文献   

10.
A finite element analysis is used to study a previously unresolved issue of the effects of platen-specimen friction on the response of the unconfined compression test; effects of platen permeability are also determined. The finite element formulation is based on the linear KLM biphasic model for articular cartilage and other hydrated soft tissues. A Galerkin weighted residual method is applied to both the solid phase and the fluid phase, and the continuity equation for the intrinsically incompressible binary mixture is introduced via a penalty method. The solid phase displacements and fluid phase velocities are interpolated for each element in terms of unknown nodal values, producing a system of first order differential equations which are solved using a standard numerical finite difference technique. An axisymmetric element of quadrilateral cross-section is developed and applied to the mechanical test problem of a cylindrical specimen of soft tissue in unconfined compression. These studies show that interfacial friction plays a major role in the unconfined compression response of articular cartilage specimens with small thickness to diameter ratios.  相似文献   

11.
Mounting evidence suggests that altered lubricant levels within synovial fluid have acute biological consequences on chondrocyte homeostasis. While these responses have been connected to increased friction, the mechanisms behind this response remain unknown. Here, we combine a frictional bioreactor with confocal elastography and image-based cellular assays to establish the link between cartilage friction, microscale shear strain, and acute, adverse cellular responses. Our incorporation of cell-scale strain measurements reveals that elevated friction generates high shear strains localized near the tissue surface, and that these elevated strains are closely associated with mitochondrial dysfunction, apoptosis, and cell death. Collectively, our data establish two pathways by which chondrocytes negatively respond to friction: an immediate necrotic response and a longer term pathway involving mitochondrial dysfunction and apoptosis. Specifically, in the surface region, where shear strains can exceed 0.07, cells are predisposed to acute death; however, below this surface region, cells exhibit a pathway consistent with apoptosis in a manner predicted by local shear strains. These data reveal a mechanism through which cellular damage in cartilage arises from compromised lubrication and show that in addition to boundary lubricants, there are opportunities upstream of apoptosis to preserve chondrocyte health in arthritis therapy.  相似文献   

12.
Bovine articular chondrocytes were maintained in high density pellet cultures with and without serum and nucleotide triphosphates for different periods of time. Despite half-lives in culture of about 3 h, adenosine triphosphate and uridine triphosphate in the presence of serum increased sulphated glycosaminoglycan and collagen deposition above control levels. In the presence of serum a single dose of uridine triphosphate on the first day of culture was sufficient to induce significant increases in subsequent proteoglycan and collagen deposition. We conclude that both adenine triphosphate and uridine triphosphate are anabolic for articular chondrocytes, and that this effect on the chondrocyte is long-term.  相似文献   

13.
This study presents direct experimental evidence for assessing the electrostatic and non-electrostatic contributions of proteoglycans to the compressive equilibrium modulus of bovine articular cartilage. Immature and mature bovine cartilage samples were tested in unconfined compression and their depth-dependent equilibrium compressive modulus was determined using strain measurements with digital image correlation analysis. The electrostatic contribution was assessed by testing samples in isotonic and hypertonic saline; the combined contribution was assessed by testing untreated and proteoglycan-depleted samples.Though it is well recognized that proteoglycans contribute significantly to the compressive stiffness of cartilage, results demonstrate that the combined electrostatic and non-electrostatic contributions may add up to more than 98% of the modulus, a magnitude not previously appreciated. Of this contribution, about two thirds arises from electrostatic effects. The compressive modulus of the proteoglycan-depleted cartilage matrix may be as low as 3 kPa, representing less than 2% of the normal tissue modulus; experimental evidence also confirms that the collagen matrix in digested cartilage may buckle under compressive strains, resulting in crimping patterns. Thus, it is reasonable to model the collagen as a fibrillar matrix that can sustain only tension. This study also demonstrates that residual stresses in cartilage do not arise exclusively from proteoglycans, since cartilage remains curled relative to its in situ geometry even after proteoglycan depletion. These increased insights on the structure–function relationships of cartilage can lead to improved constitutive models and a better understanding of the response of cartilage to physiological loading conditions.  相似文献   

14.
The experimentally measured indentation displacement and friction of normal and degraded (treated with chondroitinase AC) bovine articular cartilage plugs against a smooth steel plate were compared with the predictions based on the biphasic theory using the finite element method. It was found that the measured indentation displacement of both cartilage specimens could be predicted from the biphasic theory and the permeability for the degraded cartilage specimen was increased approximately three times. However, the measured friction coefficient was much lower for short period of loading, and the difference in the finite element prediction of friction coefficient between the normal and degraded cartilage specimens was not observed in the experiment. Therefore, it was concluded that both biphasic and other mechanisms were important in controlling the frictional and lubricating characteristics of articular cartilage in mixed and boundary lubrication regimes.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The function of articular cartilage is to support and distribute loads and to provide lubrication in the diarthrodial joints. Cartilage function is described by proper mechanical and rheological properties, strain and depth-dependent, which are not completely assessed. Unconfined and confined compression are commonly used to evaluate the Young's modulus (E) and the aggregate modulus (H(A)), respectively. The Poisson's ratio (nu) can be calculated indirectly from the equilibrium compression data, or using the biphasic indentation technique; it has recently been optically evaluated by using video microscopy during unconfined compression. The transient response of articular cartilage during confined compression depends on its permeability k; a constant value of k can be easily identified by a simple analytical model of confined compression tests, whereas more complex models or direct measurements (permeation tests) are needed to study the permeability dependence on deformation. A poroelastic finite element model of articular cartilage was developed for this purpose. The elastic parameters (E,nu) of the model were evaluated performing unconfined compression creep tests on human articular cartilage disks, whereas k was identified from the confined test response. Our combined experimental and computational method can be used to identify the parameters that define the permeability dependence on deformation, as a function of depth from articular surface.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of hyaluronic acid (HA) derivative on the proliferation and metabolism of human chondrocytes were examined. Cells were obtained from cartilage from metatarsal phalangeal joints of 20 adult humans (aged 22-63) and from femoral knee condyles of 10 subjects (aged 22-77). Chondrocytes isolated by collagenase/Dnase digestion were cultured with addition of different doses of HA for 4 weeks. Morphological studies demonstrated that HA enhanced the adhesion of cells to substrate; HA-treated chondrocytes proliferated better than chondrocytes cultured in HA-free medium. This study shows that HA improves in vitro substrate adhesion ability and proliferative activity of human cartilage cells and that the response to the treatment varies on an individual basis.  相似文献   

18.
The thermodynamic parameters which define transport of nonelectrolytes through bovine articular cartilage membranes were evaluated. H3HO, glucose and sucrose were used as permeants. These solutes permeate more readily through the upper layers (near the articular surface) than through the denser deeper layers approaching bone. Cartilage is similar in many respects to a swollen cellulose gel. Viscous-flow contributes importantly to transprot within cartilage thus greatly enhancing the movement of nutrients.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
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