Sah R L, Kim Y J, Doong J Y, Grodzinsky A J, Plaas A H, Sandy J D
Continuum Electromechanics Group, Laboratory for Electromagnetic and Electronic Systems, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
J Orthop Res. 1989;7(5):619-36. doi: 10.1002/jor.1100070502.
The biosynthetic response of calf articular cartilage explants to dynamic compression was examined over a wide range of amplitudes, waveforms, and frequencies. Glycosaminoglycan synthesis was assessed by 35S-sulfate incorporation, and amino acid uptake and protein synthesis were assessed by 3H-proline incorporation. Two culture chambers were designed to allow uniaxial radially unconfined compression and mechanical testing of cartilage disks: one chamber was used inside a standard incubator; the other was used with a mechanical spectrometer and allowed load and displacement to be monitored during compression. Dynamic stiffness measurements of 3-mm diameter disks identified a characteristic frequency [0.001 Hz (cycles/sec)] that separated low- and high-frequency regimes in which different flow and deformation phenomena predominated; e.g., at 0.0001-0.0001 Hz, significant fluid was exuded from cartilage disks, whereas at 0.01-1 Hz, hydrostratic pressure increased within disks. At the higher frequencies, oscillatory strains of only approximately 1-5% stimulated 3H-proline and 35S-sulfate incorporation by approximately 20-40%. In contrast, at the lower frequencies (a) compressions of less than 5% had no effect, consistent with the dosimetry of biosynthetic inhibition by static compression (approximately 25% compression caused a approximately 20% inhibition of radiolabel incorporation), and (b) higher amplitudes (cycling between disk thicknesses of 1.25 and 0.88-1.00 mm) stimulated 3S-sulfate incorporation by approximately 20-40%, consistent with the kinetics of response to a single 2-h compression and release. None of the compression protocols was associated with detectable alterations in (e.g., compression-induced depletion of) total glycosaminoglycan content. This study provides a framework for identifying both the physical and biological mechanisms by which dynamic compression can modulate chondrocyte biosynthesis. In addition, the culture and compression methodology potentially allows in vitro evaluation of clinical strategies of continuous passive motion therapy to stimulate cartilage remodeling.
在很宽的振幅、波形和频率范围内,研究了小牛关节软骨外植体对动态压缩的生物合成反应。通过35S-硫酸盐掺入评估糖胺聚糖的合成,通过3H-脯氨酸掺入评估氨基酸摄取和蛋白质合成。设计了两个培养室,以允许对软骨盘进行单轴径向无约束压缩和力学测试:一个培养室用于标准培养箱内;另一个与机械光谱仪一起使用,并允许在压缩过程中监测载荷和位移。对直径3毫米的圆盘进行动态刚度测量,确定了一个特征频率[0.001赫兹(周期/秒)],该频率分隔了不同流动和变形现象占主导的低频和高频区域;例如,在0.0001-0.0001赫兹时,大量液体从软骨盘中渗出,而在0.01-1赫兹时,盘内静水压力增加。在较高频率下,仅约1-5%的振荡应变刺激3H-脯氨酸和35S-硫酸盐掺入增加约20-40%。相比之下,在较低频率下,(a)小于5%的压缩没有影响,这与静态压缩生物合成抑制的剂量学一致(约25%的压缩导致放射性标记掺入约20%的抑制),并且(b)较高振幅(在1.25和0.88-1.00毫米的盘厚度之间循环)刺激3S-硫酸盐掺入增加约20-40%,这与对单次2小时压缩和释放的反应动力学一致。没有一种压缩方案与总糖胺聚糖含量的可检测变化(例如,压缩诱导的消耗)相关。本研究为确定动态压缩调节软骨细胞生物合成的物理和生物学机制提供了一个框架。此外,培养和压缩方法可能允许对连续被动运动疗法刺激软骨重塑的临床策略进行体外评估。