Department of Reconstructive Sciences, College of Dental Medicine, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, Connecticut, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2013;8(3):e59944. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0059944. Epub 2013 Mar 26.
The origin of cells that contribute to tendon healing, specifically extrinsic epitenon/paratenon cells vs. internal tendon fibroblasts, is still debated. The purpose of this study is to determine the location and phenotype of cells that contribute to healing of a central patellar tendon defect injury in the mouse. Normal adult patellar tendon consists of scleraxis-expressing (Scx) tendon fibroblasts situated among aligned collagen fibrils. The tendon body is surrounded by paratenon, which consists of a thin layer of cells that do not express Scx and collagen fibers oriented circumferentially around the tendon. At 3 days following injury, the paratenon thickens as cells within the paratenon proliferate and begin producing tenascin-C and fibromodulin. These cells migrate toward the defect site and express scleraxis and smooth muscle actin alpha by day 7. The thickened paratenon tissue eventually bridges the tendon defect by day 14. Similarly, cells within the periphery of the adjacent tendon struts express these markers and become disorganized. Cells within the defect region show increased expression of fibrillar collagens (Col1a1 and Col3a1) but decreased expression of tenogenic transcription factors (scleraxis and mohawk homeobox) and collagen assembly genes (fibromodulin and decorin). By contrast, early growth response 1 and 2 are upregulated in these tissues along with tenascin-C. These results suggest that paratenon cells, which normally do not express Scx, respond to injury by turning on Scx and assembling matrix to bridge the defect. Future studies are needed to determine the signaling pathways that drive these cells and whether they are capable of producing a functional tendon matrix. Understanding this process may guide tissue engineering strategies in the future by stimulating these cells to improve tendon repair.
细胞参与肌腱愈合的起源,特别是外在的上皮/副韧带细胞与内在的肌腱成纤维细胞,仍存在争议。本研究旨在确定细胞的位置和表型,这些细胞有助于修复小鼠中央髌腱缺陷损伤。正常的成年髌腱由位于排列整齐的胶原纤维之间的 Scleraxis 表达(Scx)肌腱成纤维细胞组成。腱体被副韧带包围,副韧带由一层不表达 Scx 的细胞和环绕腱的纤维组成。损伤后 3 天,副韧带变厚,因为副韧带内的细胞增殖并开始产生腱糖蛋白 C 和纤维调节素。这些细胞在第 7 天向缺陷部位迁移,并表达 Scleraxis 和平滑肌肌动蛋白 α。在第 14 天,增厚的副韧带组织最终桥接了腱缺陷。同样,相邻腱支柱周围的细胞也表达这些标记物并变得紊乱。缺陷区域内的细胞表现出纤维胶原(Col1a1 和 Col3a1)表达增加,但腱形成转录因子(Scleraxis 和 Mohawk 同源盒)和胶原组装基因(纤维调节素和 decorin)表达减少。相比之下,这些组织中的早期生长反应 1 和 2 以及腱糖蛋白 C 上调。这些结果表明,通常不表达 Scx 的副韧带细胞通过激活 Scx 并组装基质来桥接缺陷来对损伤做出反应。需要进一步的研究来确定驱动这些细胞的信号通路,以及它们是否能够产生功能性的腱基质。了解这个过程可能会通过刺激这些细胞来改善腱修复,为未来的组织工程策略提供指导。