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How movement lubricates bone joints
December 05, 2006
Taking a cue from machines that gently flex patients' knees to help them recover faster from joint surgery, bioengineering researchers at UC San Diego have shown that sliding forces applied to cartilage surfaces prompt cells in that tissue to produce molecules that lubricate and protect joints. The results reported in Osteoarthritis and Cartilage are important in the ongoing efforts of the group led by Robert Sah, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) professor at UCSD's Jacobs School of Engineering, to grow cartilage in the laboratory that can be used to replace patients' injured or diseased joint surfaces.
"We have shown that shear forces on cartilage prompt chondrocyte cells in it to produce proteoglycan 4," said Sah. "This is an important step toward our goal of eventually growing joint tissue for transplantation."
Proteoglycan, a name that reflects its protein and polysaccharide components, is a basic building block of connective tissue throughout the body. The chondrocyte cells of cartilage make several forms of proteoglycans, including several that build up in cartilage and contribute to its stiffness. However, proteoglycan-4 is primarily secreted into the joint fluid where it coats and lubricates cartilage surfaces.
Unfortunately, the smooth surface of the articular cartilage at the ends of bones located at joints often deteriorates with aging, becoming increasingly roughened and eroded. Those joints become painful and progress to osteoarthritis. Surgeons can replace damaged and diseased joints with artificial joints, but they would like to be able to simply resurface patients' existing joints with cartilage.
In a series of experiments, Sah's team attached bovine stifle joints, which are similar to human knee joints, to a bio-reactor that provided continuous irrigation with sterile nutritional fluids under normal physiological conditions. Immobile joints were compared to joints that were flexed 24 hours in a way that mimicked walking motions. The flexing was provided by a specially designed continuous passive motion device.
The team measured up to a three-fold increase in chondrocytes secreting proteoglycan 4 in continuously flexed joints compared to immobile controls. The flexing motion caused cartilage on the surfaces of opposing bones to slide against each other, creating so-called shear forces. In one large surface region of continuously sliding cartilage, 40 percent of the chondrocytes were secreting proteoglycan 4, whereas in the same areas of cartilage in immobilized joints only 13 percent of the chondrocytes were secreting proteoglycan 4. In areas of the joints exposed to only intermittent cartilage sliding, the effect on proteoglycan 4 production was intermediate between continuously sliding and immobilized regions of the joints.
"A challenge for us is to create large tissue grafts for transplantation," said Sah. "We are systematically addressing the technical challenges to maintain and grow healthy fragments of bone and cartilage in the laboratory and now we can use nature's self-regulating system, whereby application of shear forces to this tissue increases its synthesis of proteoglycan 4."
Scientists have known for years that defects in a gene for proteoglycan 4 result in a type of childhood joint failure that resembles osteoarthritis in the elderly. Sah's goal is to stimulate healthy chondrocytes in cartilage tissue grown in the laboratory to form robust tissue that makes proteoglycan 4 and has a smooth, well-lubricated surface.
University of California - San Diego
Science News and Science Current Events Tag Cloud This tag cloud is a visual representation of term frequencies of random science news topics with common terms grouped together and emphasized by their display size.
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The Regulation of Growth Plate Chondrocytes by Transforming Growth Factor-Beta and Its Mechanism of Action
by Rosado E. Enrique (Author)
This is a AIR FORCE INST OF TECH WRIGHT-PATTERSONAFB OH report procured by the Pentagon and made available for public release. It has been reproduced in the best form available to the Pentagon. It is not spiral-bound, but rather assembled with Velobinding in a soft, white linen cover. The Storming Media report number is A492514. The abstract provided by the Pentagon follows: Transforming growth factor-Beta 1(TGF-Beta 1) regulates chondrocytes through Smad protein-mediated mechanisms, and has been shown to increase PKC. To test whether other signaling pathways plan a role, this study examined if the physiologic response of rat costochondral growth zone (GC) chondrocytes to TGF- Beta 1 is through TGF-Beta 1 type II or III receptors and also the contribution of protein kinase C (PKC),...
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Cartilage Surgery and Future Perspectives
by Springer
The reconstruction of articular cartilage defects is still one of the major challenges for the orthopaedic surgeon. A variety of surgical techniques such as microfracturing, transplantation of osteochondral grafts and the autologeous chondrocyte transplantation have been developed over the last decades. Recent progress in material science and cell and tissue engineering has led to a worldwide increasing number of scientists working on cell-based articular cartilage repair strategies. In a workshop symposium held in Würzburg, Germany, in November 2002 leading scientists from biomedical engineering, basic science and specialized surgeons discussed the state of the art in 'Cartilage Surgery and Future Perspectives'.
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Current Developments in Autologous Chondrocyte Transplantation (Round Table)
by George Bentley (Author)
Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital, Stanmore, UK. Proceedings of a Round Table discussion held at the Royal Society of Medicine, London, UK, on September 14, 2002. Softcover.
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Cell implants helpful in knee OA in young patients. (Autologous Chondrocyte Implantation).: An article from: Internal Medicine News
by Michele G. Sullivan (Author)
This digital document is an article from Internal Medicine News, published by International Medical News Group on June 1, 2003. The length of the article is 495 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details Title: Cell implants helpful in knee OA in young patients. (Autologous Chondrocyte Implantation). Author: Michele G. Sullivan Publication: Internal Medicine News (Magazine/Journal) Date: June 1, 2003 Publisher: International Medical News Group Volume: 36 Issue: 11 Page: 24(1)
Distributed by Thomson...
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Mechanobiology: Cartilage and Chondrocyte - Volume 5 - Volume 73 Biomedical and Health Research - Book Edition of Bioreheology (Biomedical and Health Research)
by J.-F. Stoltz (Author)
This book covers the proceedings of the Fifth Symposium on Mechanobiology of Cartilage and Chondrocyte. Mechanobiology can be now considered as a vigorous branch of biomechanics, biorheology and physiology mainly concerned with the study of the influence of mechanical forces on cells and tissues and their clinical or therapeutical applications. As we are now in the age of proteomics, genomics and cell micromechanical approaches, suing methods like laser tweezers or confocal microscopy, mechanobiology brings new challenges. With such new research, mechanobiology promises new diagnostic and therapeutic approaches. In other respect there has been increasing interest over recent years in the fundamental role played by local mechanical parameters in chondrocyte regulations and cartilage...
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Facilitative Glucose Transporters in Articular Chondrocytes: Expression, Distribution and Functional Regulation of GLUT Isoforms by Hypoxia, Hypoxia Mimetics, ... in Anatomy, Embryology and Cell Biology)
by Ali Mobasheri (Author), Carolyn A. Bondy (Author), Kelle Moley (Author), Alexandrina Ferreira Mendes (Author), Susana Carvalho Rosa (Author), Stephen Richardson (Author), Judith A. Hoyland (Author), Richard Barrett-Jolley (Author), Mehdi Shakibaei (Author)
Articular cartilage is a unique and highly specialized avascular connective tissue in which the availability of oxygen and glucose is significantly lower than synovial fluid and plasma. Glucose is an essential source of energy during embryonic growth and fetal development and is vital for mesenchymal cell differentiation, chondrogenesis and skeletal morphogenesis. Glucose is an important metabolic fuel for differentiated chondrocytes during post-natal development and in adult articular cartilage and is a common structural precursor for the synthesis of extracellular matrix glycosaminoglycans. Glucose metabolism is critical for growth plate chondrocytes which participate in long bone growth. Glucose concentrations in articular cartilage can fluctuate depending on age, physical activity...
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Nongenomic Regulation of Protein Kinase C Isoforms by Vitamin D metabolites in Chondrocyte Matrix Vesicles and Plasma Membranes
by Earl B. Ellis (Author)
This is a AIR FORCE INST OF TECH WRIGHT-PATTERSON AFB OH report procured by the Pentagon and made available for public release. It has been reproduced in the best form available to the Pentagon. It is not spiral-bound, but rather assembled with Velobinding in a soft, white linen cover. The Storming Media report number is A675023. The abstract provided by the Pentagon follows: Normal biologic function of an organism requires communication and regulation at several levels. Perhaps the most fundamental communication is that which occurs between the extracellular matrix and the intracellular environment. Elucidation of the signal transduction pathways in the areas of chondrocyte, osteoblast and inflammatory regulation would have significant implications in wound healing, regenerative...
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Mechanobiology: Cartilage and Chondrocyte, Vol. 4 (Biomedical and Health Research, Vol. 68)
by J.-F. Stoltz (Author)
Over recent years, there has been increasing interest in the fundamental role played by local mechanical parameters in chondrocyte regulation and cartilage dysfunction as a first step in the development of osteoarthritis. This is how the idea of mechanobiology and the concept of mechanotransduction were born in the 90Â’s. Indeed, a broad diversity of physiological phenomena is induced by mechanical stimuli (hearing, orientation to gravity, touch, tissue remodeling...) but the mechanism by which mechanical forces may regulate a physiological response is still unknown. In other respects, the concept of regenerative medicine has recently developed in parallel to this. Regenerative medicine is an emerging multidisciplinary field involving medicine, biology, chemistry, mechanics and...
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Effectiveness of autologous chondrocyte transplantation for hyaline cartilage defects in knees: a rapid and systematic review
by P. Et al Jobanputra (Author)
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Implants best for full-thickness articular cartilage knee lesions. (Autologous Chondrocytes).: An article from: Internal Medicine News
by Bruce Jancin (Author)
This digital document is an article from Internal Medicine News, published by International Medical News Group on February 1, 2003. The length of the article is 7796 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details Title: Implants best for full-thickness articular cartilage knee lesions. (Autologous Chondrocytes). Author: Bruce Jancin Publication: Internal Medicine News (Magazine/Journal) Date: February 1, 2003 Publisher: International Medical News Group Volume: 36 Issue: 3 Page: 10(1)
Distributed by Thomson...
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