Akanda Shamimur R, Walter Christopher, Davis Alexandra L, Jing Liufang, Pathak Amit, Setton Lori A
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
Department of Mechanical Engineering & Material Science, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
Tissue Eng Part A. 2025 Feb;31(3-4):100-107. doi: 10.1089/ten.tea.2024.0221. Epub 2025 Jan 6.
The synovium is a loose connective tissue that separates the intra-articular (IA) joint compartments of all diarthrodial joints from the systemic circulation. It can be divided into two layers: the intima, a thin and cell-dense layer atop a more heterogeneous subintima, composed of collagen and various cell types. The subintima contains penetrating capillaries and lymphatic vessels that rapidly clear injected drugs from the joint space which may vary not only with drug size and charge but also with the microstructure and composition of the intima and subintima of the synovium. Prior work has measured the mechanical properties and solute diffusivities in the synovium of porcine, bovine, and human joints. Here, we measured the Young's moduli of synovium from smaller joints of the rat knee, as well as pig and human, using atomic force microscopy (AFM). The format for AFM enabled testing of intima and subintimal regions of synovium in all three species. The Young's moduli of the subintimal regions were similar across all three species (1-1.5 kPa). Furthermore, there was little evidence of differences in Young's moduli between synovium from the intima and subintima in each species. A general similarity of data from AFM testing with moduli measured with bulk testing of pig and human synovium suggests that AFM can be useful to measure the mechanical properties of smaller joint synovium and spatial variations in stiffness with depth. Enzymatic digestion of synovium tissue from the pig was also performed with findings of lower moduli values following treatment with chondroitinase ABC but not collagenase. Although the molecular composition of the synovium is not yet fully characterized and may vary across species, these findings suggest that noncollagenous species contribute to AFM-measured properties in synovium. These are some of the first data to measure mechanical properties in small joint synovium and will be useful in models studying IA drug clearances in joints with pathology and following treatment.
滑膜是一种疏松结缔组织,它将所有动关节的关节内(IA)关节腔与体循环分隔开来。它可分为两层:内膜,是一层薄且细胞密集的层,位于更具异质性的内膜下层之上,内膜下层由胶原蛋白和各种细胞类型组成。内膜下层含有穿透性毛细血管和淋巴管,可迅速清除关节腔内注入的药物,药物清除速度不仅可能因药物大小和电荷而异,还可能因滑膜内膜和内膜下层的微观结构和组成而异。先前的研究已经测量了猪、牛和人类关节滑膜的力学性能和溶质扩散率。在这里,我们使用原子力显微镜(AFM)测量了大鼠膝关节以及猪和人类较小关节的滑膜杨氏模量。AFM的这种形式能够测试所有三个物种滑膜的内膜和内膜下层区域。所有三个物种内膜下层区域的杨氏模量相似(1 - 1.5千帕)。此外,每个物种中滑膜内膜和内膜下层之间的杨氏模量几乎没有差异的证据。AFM测试数据与猪和人类滑膜整体测试测得的模量普遍相似,这表明AFM可用于测量较小关节滑膜的力学性能以及刚度随深度的空间变化。还对猪的滑膜组织进行了酶消化,结果发现用软骨素酶ABC处理后模量值较低,但用胶原酶处理后并非如此。尽管滑膜的分子组成尚未完全表征,并且可能因物种而异,但这些发现表明非胶原蛋白对AFM测量的滑膜性能有贡献。这些是首批测量小关节滑膜力学性能的数据,将有助于研究关节病理状态下及治疗后IA药物清除的模型。