Meinert Christoph, Schrobback Karsten, Levett Peter A, Lutton Cameron, Sah Robert L, Klein Travis J
Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland 4059, Australia.
Department of Bioengineering, University of California-San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, United States.
Acta Biomater. 2017 Apr 1;52:105-117. doi: 10.1016/j.actbio.2016.10.011. Epub 2016 Oct 8.
Biological tissues at articulating surfaces, such as articular cartilage, typically have remarkable low-friction properties that limit tissue shear during movement. However, these frictional properties change with trauma, aging, and disease, resulting in an altered mechanical state within the tissues. Yet, it remains unclear how these surface changes affect the behaviour of embedded cells when the tissue is mechanically loaded. Here, we developed a cytocompatible, bilayered hydrogel system that permits control of surface frictional properties without affecting other bulk physicochemical characteristics such as compressive modulus, mass swelling ratio, and water content. This hydrogel system was applied to investigate the effect of variations in surface friction on the biological response of human articular chondrocytes to shear loading. Shear strain in these hydrogels during dynamic shear loading was significantly higher in high-friction hydrogels than in low-friction hydrogels. Chondrogenesis was promoted following dynamic shear stimulation in chondrocyte-encapsulated low-friction hydrogel constructs, whereas matrix synthesis was impaired in high-friction constructs, which instead exhibited increased catabolism. Our findings demonstrate that the surface friction of tissue-engineered cartilage may act as a potent regulator of cellular homeostasis by governing the magnitude of shear deformation during mechanical loading, suggesting a similar relationship may also exist for native articular cartilage.
Excessive mechanical loading is believed to be a major risk factor inducing pathogenesis of articular cartilage and other load-bearing tissues. Yet, the mechanisms leading to increased transmission of mechanical stimuli to cells embedded in the tissue remain largely unexplored. Here, we demonstrate that the tribological properties of loadbearing tissues regulate cellular behaviour by governing the magnitude of mechanical deformation arising from physiological tissue function. Based on these findings, we propose that changes to articular surface friction as they occur with trauma, aging, or disease, may initiate tissue pathology by increasing the magnitude of mechanical stress on embedded cells beyond a physiological level.
关节表面的生物组织,如关节软骨,通常具有显著的低摩擦特性,可在运动过程中限制组织剪切力。然而,这些摩擦特性会随创伤、衰老和疾病而改变,导致组织内机械状态发生变化。然而,当组织受到机械加载时,这些表面变化如何影响嵌入细胞的行为仍不清楚。在此,我们开发了一种细胞相容性双层水凝胶系统,该系统可控制表面摩擦特性,而不影响其他整体物理化学特性,如压缩模量、质量溶胀率和含水量。该水凝胶系统用于研究表面摩擦变化对人关节软骨细胞对剪切加载的生物学反应的影响。在动态剪切加载过程中,高摩擦水凝胶中的剪切应变明显高于低摩擦水凝胶。在包裹软骨细胞的低摩擦水凝胶构建体中,动态剪切刺激后软骨生成得到促进,而在高摩擦构建体中基质合成受损,反而表现出分解代谢增加。我们的研究结果表明,组织工程软骨的表面摩擦可能通过控制机械加载过程中的剪切变形大小,作为细胞稳态的有效调节因子,这表明天然关节软骨可能也存在类似关系。
过度的机械加载被认为是诱发关节软骨和其他承重组织发病的主要危险因素。然而,导致机械刺激向组织中嵌入细胞传递增加的机制在很大程度上仍未被探索。在此,我们证明承重组织的摩擦学特性通过控制生理组织功能产生的机械变形大小来调节细胞行为。基于这些发现,我们提出,创伤、衰老或疾病导致的关节表面摩擦变化,可能通过将嵌入细胞上的机械应力大小增加到生理水平以上而引发组织病理学。