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1.
The aim of this study was to determine the characteristic differences in tendinocytes derived from tendons in the equine forelimb, superficial digital flexor tendon (SDFT), deep digital flexor tendon (DDFT) and common digital extensor tendon (CDET), in morphology, proliferation, collagen production ability and ability for synthesis of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs). Significant differences were observed in cell number in vivo. The cellular number was largest in the SDFT and smallest in the CDET. The values of in vitro proliferation ratios and ability for synthesis of collagen and MMPs were largest in the SDFT and smallest in the CDET. Addition of TNFα to culture of all three types of tendinocytes increased the synthesis of both proMMP-9 (except CDET) and collagen and decreased proMMP-13 synthesis and had no effect on proMMP-2 synthesis. Flexor tendons in forelimbs (SDFT and DDFT) restore energy during locomotion and are more easily injured than are extensor tendons. This structural property would cause active ECM and MMPs synthesis. And CDET have very low turnover potential; in the small number of cells, low cellular proliferation, lower ability for synthesis of collagen and MMPs. The isolated tendinocytes provided much information on the characteristics and properties of tendons for the ECM turnover system and responsiveness of tendinocytes to complex inflammatory responses in tendinopathy.  相似文献   

2.
Matrix metabolism rate differs in functionally distinct tendons.   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Tendon matrix integrity is vital to ensure adequate mechanical properties for efficient function. Although historically tendon was considered to be relatively inert, recent studies have shown that tendon matrix turnover is active. During normal physiological activities some tendons are subjected to stress and strains much closer to their failure properties than others. Tendons with low safety margins are those which function as energy stores such as the equine superficial digital flexor tendon (SDFT) and human Achilles tendon (AT). We postulate therefore that energy storing tendons suffer a higher degree of micro-damage and thus have a higher rate of matrix turnover than positional tendons. The hypothesis was tested using tissue from the equine SDFT and common digital extensor tendon (CDET). Matrix turnover was assessed indirectly by a combination of measurements for matrix age, markers of degradation, potential for degradation and protein expression. Results show that despite higher cellularity, the SDFT has lower relative levels of mRNA for collagen types I and III. Non-collagenous proteins, although expressed at different levels per cell, do not appear to differ between tendon types. Relative levels of mRNA for MMP1, MMP13 and both pro-MMP3 and MMP13 protein activity were significantly higher in the CDET. Correspondingly levels of cross-linked carboxyterminal telopeptide of type I collagen (ICTP) were higher in the CDET and tissue fluorescence lower suggesting more rapid turnover of the collagenous component. Reduced or inhibited collagen turnover in the SDFT may account for the high level of degeneration and subsequent injury compared to the CDET.  相似文献   

3.
This study explores the hypothesis that high-intensity exercise induces degenerative changes in the injury-prone equine superficial digital flexor tendon (SDFT), but not in the rarely injured common digital extensor tendon (CDET). The horse represents a large-animal model that is applicable to human tendon and ligament physiology and pathology. Twelve age-matched female horses undertook galloping exercise three times a week with trotting exercise on alternative days (high-intensity group, n = 6) or only walking exercise (low-intensity group, n = 6) for 18 mo. The SDFT, suspensory ligament, deep digital flexor tendon, and CDET were harvested from the forelimb. Tissue from the mid-metacarpal region of the right limb tendons was analyzed for water, DNA, sulfated glycosaminoglycan and collagen content, collagen type III-to-I ratios, collagen cross-links, and tissue fluorescence. Left limb tendons were mechanically tested to failure. The analyses showed matrix composition to have considerable diversity between the functionally different structures. In addition, the specific structures responded differently to the imposed exercise. High-intensity training resulted in a significant decrease in the GAG content in the SDFT, but no change in collagen content, despite a decrease in collagen fibril diameters. There were no signs of degeneration or change in mechanical properties of the SDFT. The CDET had a lower water content following high-intensity training and a higher elastic modulus. Long-term, high-intensity training in skeletally mature individuals results in changes that suggest accelerated aging in the injury-prone SDFT and adaptation in the CDET.  相似文献   

4.
The purpose of this study is to examine the intracellular distribution of collagen types I, III and V in tenocytes using triple-label immunofluorescence staining technique in high-density tenocyte culture on Filter Well Inserts (FWI). The tenocytes were incubated for 4 weeks under monolayer conditions and for 3 weeks on FWI. At the end of the third week of high-density culture, we observed tenocyte aggregation followed by macromass cluster formation. Immunofluorescence labeling with anti-collagen type I antibody revealed that the presence of collagen type I was mostly around the nucleus. Type III collagen was more diffused in the cytoplasm. Type V collagen was detected in fibrillar and vesicular forms in the cytoplasm. We conclude that, the high-density culture on FWI is an appropriate method for the production of tenocytes without loosing specialized processes such as the synthesis of different collagen molecules. We consider that the high-density culture system is suitable for in vitro applications which affect tendon biology and will improve our understanding of the biological behavior of tenocytes in view of adequate matrix structure synthesis. Such high-density cultures may serve as a model system to provide sufficient quantities of tenocytes to prepare tenocyte-polymer constructs for tissue engineering applications in tendon repair.  相似文献   

5.
Cultivation of human tenocytes in high-density culture   总被引:4,自引:1,他引:3  
Limited supplies of tendon tissue for use in reconstructive surgery require development of phenotypically stable tenocytes cultivated in vitro. Tenocytes in monolayer culture display an unstable phenotype and tend to dedifferentiate, but those in three-dimensional culture may remain phenotypically and functionally differentiated. In this study we established a three-dimensional high-density culture system for cultivation of human tenocytes for tissue engineering. Human tenocytes were expanded in monolayer culture before transfer to high-density culture. The synthesis of major extracellular matrix proteins and the ultrastructural morphology of the three-dimensional cultures were investigated for up to 2 weeks by electron microscopy, immunohistochemistry, immunoblotting and quantitative, real-time PCR. Differentiated tenocytes were able to survive over a period of 14 days in high-density culture. During the culture period tenocytes exhibited a typical tenocyte morphology embedded in an extensive extracellular matrix containing cross-striated collagen type I fibrils and proteoglycans. Moreover, expression of the tendon-specific marker scleraxis underlined the tenocytic identity of these cells. Taken together, we conclude that the three-dimensional high-density cultures may be useful as a new approach for obtaining differentiated tenocytes for autologous tenocyte transplantation to support tendon and ligament healing and to investigate the effect of tendon-affecting agents on tendon in vitro.  相似文献   

6.
Tendon healing is a time consuming process leading to the formation of a functionally altered reparative tissue. Tissue engineering‐based tendon reconstruction is attracting more and more interest. The aim of this study was to establish tenocyte expansion on microcarriers in continuous bioreactor cultures and to study tenocyte behavior during this new approach. Human hamstring tendon‐derived tenocytes were expanded in monolayer culture before being seeded at two different seeding densities (2.00 and 4.00 × 106 cells/1000 cm2 surface) on Cytodex? type 3 microcarriers. Tenocytes' vitality, growth kinetics and glucose/lactic acid metabolism were determined dependent on the seeding densities and stirring velocities (20 or 40 rpm) in a spinner flask bioreactor over a period of 2 weeks. Gene expression profiles of tendon extracellular matrix (ECM) markers (type I/III collagen, decorin, cartilage oligomeric protein [COMP], aggrecan) and the tendon marker scleraxis were analyzed using real time detection polymerase chain reaction (RTD‐PCR). Type I collagen and decorin deposition was demonstrated applying immunolabeling. Tenocytes adhered on the carriers, remained vital, proliferated and revealed an increasing glucose consumption and lactic acid formation under all culture conditions. “Bead‐to‐bead” transfer of cells from one microcarrier to another, a prerequisite for continuous tenocyte expansion, was demonstrated by scanning electron microscopy. Type I and type III collagen gene expression was mainly unaffected, whereas aggrecan and partly also decorin and COMP expression was significantly downregulated compared to monolayer cultures. Scleraxis gene expression revealed no significant regulation on the carriers. In conclusion, tenocytes could be successfully expanded on microcarriers. Therefore, bioreactors are promising tools for continuous tenocyte expansion. © 2013 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 30:142–151, 2014  相似文献   

7.
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are widely used in patients with injuries and inflammation of tendon and ligament, and as post-surgical analgesics. The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of indomethacin, a classic NSAID and its combinational effect with an anabolic agent of skeletal tissue, lactoferrin, on the proliferation and collagen formation of human tenocytes in vitro. A factorial experimental design was employed to study the dose-dependent effect of the combination of indomethacin and lactoferrin. The results showed that indomethacin at high concentration (100 μM) inhibited human tenocyte proliferation in culture medium with 1–10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) in vitro. Also, high dose of indomethacin inhibited the collagen formation of human tenocytes in 1% FBS culture medium. Lactoferrin at 50–100 μg/ml promoted human tenocyte survival in serum-free culture medium and enhanced proliferation and collagen synthesis of human tenocytes in 1% FBS culture medium. When 50–100 μg/ml lactoferrin was used in combination with 100–200 μM indomethacin, it partially rescued the inhibitory effects of indomethacin on human tenocyte proliferation, viability and collagen formation. To our knowledge, it is the first evidence that lactoferrin is anabolic to human tenocytes in vitro and reverses potential inhibitory effects of NSAIDs on human tenocytes.  相似文献   

8.
Elevation of tendon core temperature during severe activity is well known. However, its effects on tenocyte function have not been studied in detail. The present study tested a hypothesis that heat stimulation upregulates tenocyte catabolism, which can be modulated by the inhibition or the enhancement of gap junction intercellular communication (GJIC). Tenocytes isolated from rabbit Achilles tendons were subjected to heat stimulation at 37 °C, 41 °C or 43 °C for 30 min, and changes in cell viability, gene expressions and GJIC were examined. It was found that GJIC exhibited no changes by the stimulation even at 43 °C, but cell viability was decreased and catabolic and proinflammatory gene expressions were upregulated. Inhibition of GJIC demonstrated further upregulated catabolic and proinflammatory gene expressions. In contrast, enhanced GJIC, resulting from forced upregulation of connexin 43 gene, counteracted the heat-induced upregulation of catabolic and proinflammatory genes. These findings suggest that the temperature rise in tendon core could upregulate catabolic and proinflammatory activities, potentially leading to the onset of tendinopathy, and such upregulations could be suppressed by the enhancement of GJIC. Therefore, to prevent tendon injury at an early stage from becoming chronic injury, tendon core temperature and GJIC could be targets for post-activity treatments.  相似文献   

9.
The culture of rabbit tenocytes could be a useful model in the study of the physiopathology and pharmacotoxicology of tendons. This work was undertaken to examine the in vitro behavior of tenocytes from juvenile rabbit Achilles tendons. We report observations of the morphological and biological characteristics of primary culture and subsequent passages of rabbit tendon cells cultured in monolayer. Data obtained by electron microscopy and growth curves were complementary. After 36 passages, the generation time of tenocytes did not change and no sign of senescene could be seen. Primary culture and the first passages retained the expression of tenocyte differentiated functions, synthesis of type I collagen and decorin. Cell growth behavior was not modified upon passaging. However, when subcultured, tenocytes displayed a modulated phenotype.  相似文献   

10.
The remodeling of extracellular matrix is a crucial mechanism in tendon development and the proliferation of fibroblasts is a key factor in this process. The purpose of this study was to further elucidate the role of TIEG1 in mediating important tenocyte properties throughout the aging process. Wildtype and TIEG1 knockout tenocytes adhesion, spreading and proliferation were characterized on different substrates (fibronectin, collagen type I, gelatin and laminin) and the expression levels of various genes known to be involved with tendon development were analyzed by RT-PCR. The experiments revealed age-dependent and substrate-dependent properties for both wildtype and TIEG1 knockout tenocytes. Taken together, our results indicate an important role for TIEG1 in regulating tenocytes adhesion, spreading, and proliferation throughout the aging process. Understanding the basic mechanisms of TIEG1 in tenocytes may provide valuable information for treating multiple tendon disorders.  相似文献   

11.
Development of regenerative therapies for damaged tendons remains a great challenge, largely because of lack of information regarding the mechanisms responsible for differentiation of tenocytes. Mouse tenocytes have not been fully characterized owing to the absence of efficient and reproducible methods for their in vitro expansion without losing phenotypic features. The objective of the study was to establish an improved and reliable method for stable primary culture of mouse tenocytes by using collagen gel. Achilles and tail tendon tissues were harvested and embedded in collagen gel. After 10 days of continuous culture, the gel was digested and cells were passaged on tissue culture-treated plastic dishes. Mouse tenocytes cultured in collagen gel exhibited significantly shorter doubling time and higher numbers of proliferation when maintained on the plastic dishes compared with those cultured without using gel. Transmission electron microscopic analyses showed that cultured tenocytes retained some morphological features of tenocytes in tendon tissues, such as cell–cell junctional complex formation, well-developed rough endoplasmic reticulum, and mitochondria in their cytoplasm. mRNA expression of tenocyte markers (tenomodulin, type I collagen, periostin, and scleraxis) was higher in cells cultured in collagen gel than in those cultured in the absence of gel. Our results show that tenocytes cultured using the collagen gel method express typical lineage markers and exhibit improved growth characteristics, thus providing a stable platform for studying molecular mechanisms that control their differentiation.  相似文献   

12.
It has been hypothesised that substance P (SP) may be produced by primary fibroblastic tendon cells (tenocytes), and that this production, together with the widespread distribution of the neurokinin-1 receptor (NK-1 R) in tendon tissue, could play an important role in the development of tendinopathy, a condition of chronic tendon pain and thickening. The aim of this study was to examine the possibility of endogenous SP production and the expression of NK-1 R by human tenocytes. Because tendinopathy is related to overload, and because the predominant tissue pathology (tendinosis) underlying early tendinopathy is characterized by tenocyte hypercellularity, the production of SP in response to loading/strain and the effects of exogenously administered SP on tenocyte proliferation were also studied. A cell culture model of primary human tendon cells was used. The vast majority of tendon cells were immunopositive for the tenocyte/fibroblast markers tenomodulin and vimentin, and immunocytochemical counterstaining revealed that positive immunoreactions for SP and NK-1 R were seen in a majority of these cells. Gene expression analyses showed that mechanical loading (strain) of tendon cell cultures using the FlexCell© technique significantly increased the mRNA levels of SP, whereas the expression of NK-1 R mRNA decreased in loaded as compared to unloaded tendon cells. Reduced NK-1 R protein was also observed, using Western blot, after exogenously administered SP at a concentration of 10−7 M. SP exposure furthermore resulted in increased cell metabolism, increased cell viability, and increased cell proliferation, all of which were found to be specifically mediated via the NK-1 R; this in turn involving a common mitogenic cell signalling pathway, namely phosphorylation of ERK1/2. This study indicates that SP, produced by tenocytes in response to mechanical loading, may regulate proliferation through an autocrine loop involving the NK-1 R.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Gap junction communication is an essential component in the mechanosensitive response of tenocytes. However, little is known about direct mechanoregulation of gap junction turnover and permeability. The present study tests the hypothesis that mechanical loading alters gap junction communication between tenocyte within tendon fascicles. Viable tenocytes within rat tail tendon fasicles were labelled with calcein-AM and subjected to a fluorescent loss induced by photobleaching (FLIP) protocol. A designated target cell within a row of tenocytes was continuously photobleached at 100% laser power whilst recording the fluorescent intensity of neighbouring cells. A mathematical compartment model was developed to estimate the intercellular communication between tenocytes based upon the experimental FLIP data. This produced a permeability parameter, k, which quantifies the degree of functioning gap functions between cells as confirmed by the complete inhibition of FLIP by the inhibitor 18α-glycyrrhentic acid. The application of 1N static tensile load for 10?min had no effect on gap junction communication. However, when loading was increased to 1?h, there was a statistically significant reduction in gap junction permeability. This coincided with suppression of connexin 43 protein expression in loaded samples as determined by confocal immunofluorescence. However, there was an upregulation of connexin 43 mRNA. These findings demonstrate that tenocytes remodel their gap junctions in response to alterations in mechanical loading with a complex mechanosensitive mechanism of breakdown and remodelling. This is therefore the first study to show that tenocyte gap junctions are not only important in transmitting mechanically activated signals but that mechanical loading directly regulates gap junction permeability.  相似文献   

15.
The transmission of mechanical muscle force to bone for musculoskeletal stability and movement is one of the most important functions of tendon. The load-bearing tendon core is composed of highly aligned collagen-rich fascicles interspersed with stromal cells (tenocytes). Despite being built to bear very high mechanical stresses, supra-physiological/repetitive mechanical overloading leads to tendon microdamage in fascicles, and potentially to tendon disease and rupture. To date, it is unclear to what extent intrinsic healing mechanisms of the tendon core compartment can repair microdamage. In the present study, we investigated the healing capacity of the tendon core compartment in an ex vivo tissue explant model. To do so, we isolated rat tail tendon fascicles, damaged them by applying a single stretch to various degrees of sub-rupture damage and longitudinally assessed downstream functional and structural changes over a period of several days. Functional damage was assessed by changes in the elastic modulus of the material stress-strain curves, and biological viability of the resident tenocytes. Structural damage was quantified using a fluorescent collagen hybridizing peptide (CHP) to label mechanically disrupted collagen structures. While we observed functional mechanical damage for strains above 2% of the initial fascicle length, structural collagen damage was only detectable for 6% strain and beyond. Minimally loaded/damaged fascicles (2–4% strain) progressively lost elastic modulus over the course of tissue culture, despite their collagen structures remaining intact with high degree of maintained cell viability. In contrast, more severely overloaded fascicles (6–8% strain) with damage at the molecular/collagen level showed no further loss of the elastic modulus but markedly decreased cell viability. Surprisingly, in these heavily damaged fascicles the elastic modulus partially recovered, an effect also seen in further experiments on devitalized fascicles, implying the possibility of a non-cellular but matrix-driven mechanism of molecular repair. Overall, our findings indicate that the tendon core has very little capacity for self-repair of microdamage. We conclude that stromal tenocytes likely do not play a major role in anabolic repair of tendon matrix microdamage, but rather mediate catabolic matrix breakdown and communication with extrinsic cells that are able to effect tissue repair.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Age‐related tendon degeneration (tendinosis) is characterized by a phenotypic change in which tenocytes display characteristics of fibrochondrocytes and mineralized fibrochondrocytes. As tendon degeneration has been noted in vivo in areas of decreased tendon vascularity, we hypothesized that hypoxia is responsible for the development of the tendinosis phenotype, and that these effects are more pronounced in aged tenocytes. Hypoxic (1% O2) culture of aged, tendinotic, and young human tenocytes resulted in a mineralized fibrochondrocyte phenotype in aged tenocytes, and a fibrochondrocyte phenotype in young and tendinotic tenocytes. Investigation of the molecular mechanism responsible for this phenotype change revealed that the fibrochondrocyte phenotype in aged tenocytes occurs with decreased Rac1 activity in response to hypoxia. In young hypoxic tenocytes, however, the fibrochondrocyte phenotype occurs with concomitant decreased Rac1 activity coupled with increased RhoA activity. Using pharmacologic and adenoviral manipulation, we confirmed that these hypoxic effects on the tenocyte phenotype are linked directly to the activity of RhoA/Rac1 GTPase in in vitro human cell culture and tendon explants. These results demonstrate that hypoxia drives tenocyte phenotypic changes, and provide a molecular insight into the development of human tendinosis that occurs with aging.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The relative amounts of iso-tRNAsGly and iso-tRNAsPro existing in chick embryo tendon are indicative of a specialization of the tRNA population for collagen synthesis. These amounts are not modified (i) in primary avian tendon (PAT) cells in culture for which the procollagen production varies from about 10% of total protein synthesis to 60% and (ii) in tendons from immature chicks, which show a 3-fold decrease of procollagen production with increasing age. The characteristic tRNA pattern was not maintained in cells which had lost the ability to make high levels of collagen as observed in the cases of: (i) PAT cells reaching confluency; (ii) virus-transformed PAT cells and (iii) tendon from adult chick. Our data are consistent with the idea that tendon tRNA specialization for collagen synthesis is a differentiation feature independent of the expression level of the collagenic function but related to its maintenance.  相似文献   

20.
The composition of the extracellular matrix changes during dermal repair. Initially, hyaluronan (HA) concentration is high, however, by day 3, HA is eliminated. HA optimizes collagen organization within granulation tissue. One possible mechanism of HA modulation of collagen packing is through the promotion of gap junction intercellular communication (GJIC). Gap junctions are gated channels that allow rapid intercellular communication and synchronization of coupled cell activities. The gap junction channel is composed of connexin (Cx) proteins that form a gated channel between coupled cells. HA is reported to enhance Cx43 expression in transformed fibroblasts. GJIC was quantified by the scrape loading technique and reported as a coupling index. The coupling index for human dermal fibroblasts was 4.6 +/- 0.2, while the coupling index for fibroblasts treated with HA more than doubled to 10.6 +/- 0.7. By Western blot analysis no differences were appreciated in the protein levels of Cx43 or beta-catenin, a protein involved in the translocation of Cx to the cell surface. By immuno-histology Cx43 and beta-catenin were evenly distributed throughout the cell in controls, but in cells treated with HA these proteins were co-localized to the cell surface. Coupled fibroblasts are reported to enhance the organization of collagen fibrils. It is proposed that HA increases the accumulation of Cx43 and beta-catenin on the cell surface, leading to greater GJIC and enhanced collagen organization.  相似文献   

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