Abstract

BackgroundHypoxia has been shown to be able to induce tenogenic differentiation and proliferation of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) which lead hypoxia-induced MSCs to be a potential treatment for tendon injury. However, little is known about the mechanism underlying the tenogenic differentiation and proliferation process of hypoxic MSCs, which limited the application of differentiation-inducing therapies in tendon repair. This study was designed to investigate the role of Mohawk homeobox (Mkx) in tenogenic differentiation and proliferation of hypoxic MSCs.MethodsqRT-PCR, western blot, and immunofluorescence staining were performed to evaluate the expression of Mkx and other tendon-associated markers in adipose-derived MSCs (AMSCs) and bone marrow-derived MSCs (BMSCs) under hypoxia condition. Small interfering RNA technique was applied to observe the effect of Mkx levels on the expression of tendon-associated markers in normoxic and hypoxic BMSCs. Hypoxic BMSCs infected with Mkx-specific short hair RNA (shRNA) or scramble were implanted into the wound gaps of injured patellar tendons to assess the effect of Mkx levels on tendon repair. In addition, cell counting kit-8 assay, colony formation unit assay, cell cycle analysis, and EdU assay were adopted to determine the proliferation capacity of normoxic or hypoxic BMSCs infected with or without Mkx-specific shRNA.ResultsOur data showed that the expression of Mkx significantly increased in hypoxic AMSCs and increased much higher in hypoxic BMSCs. Our results also detected that the expression of tenogenic differentiation markers after downregulation of Mkx were significantly decreased not only in normoxic BMSCs, but also in hypoxic BMSCs which paralleled the inferior histological evidences, worse biomechanical properties, and smaller diameters of collagen fibrils in vivo. In addition, our in vitro data demonstrated that the optical density values, the clone numbers, the percentage of cells in S phage, and cell proliferation potential of both normoxic and hypoxic BMSCs were all significantly increased after knockdown of Mkx and were also significantly enhanced in both AMSCs and BMSCs in hypoxia condition under which the expression of Mkx was upregulated.ConclusionsThese findings strongly suggested that Mkx mediated hypoxia-induced tenogenic differentiation of MSCs but could not completely repress the proliferation of hypoxic MSCs.

Highlights

  • Tendon is composed of collagen fibers interspaced by little vessel [1, 2]

  • Chen et al Stem Cell Research & Therapy (2021) 12:426. These findings strongly suggested that Mohawk homeobox (Mkx) mediated hypoxia-induced tenogenic differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) but could not completely repress the proliferation of hypoxic MSCs

  • Our study found that hypoxia showed stronger potential than Transforming growth factor (Tgf)-β1 to enhance the expression of Mkx in both adipose-derived MSCs (AMSCs) and bone marrow-derived MSCs (BMSCs) and that knockdown of Mkx reduced the tenogenic differentiation of normoxic BMSCs and the tenogenesis of hypoxic BMSCs in vitro and in vivo

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Summary

Introduction

Tendon is composed of collagen fibers interspaced by little vessel [1, 2]. The forces transmission from muscles to bones in body movement and the hypovascularity make tendons tend to be subject to chronic injury, which accounts for the fact that tendon injury is a common but challenging medical problem, especially in athletes [2,3,4]. Differentiation-inducing therapy of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) has been reported to be potential in treating tendon injury [2, 6, 7]. Among the various differentiation-inducing therapies, hypoxia has shown to be an efficient inductor in tenogenic differentiation of MSCs in repairing tendon injury [19,20,21], and has been found to promote the proliferation of MSCs [19, 22,23,24]. Hypoxia has been shown to be able to induce tenogenic differentiation and proliferation of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) which lead hypoxia-induced MSCs to be a potential treatment for tendon injury. Little is known about the mechanism underlying the tenogenic differentiation and proliferation process of hypoxic MSCs, which limited the application of differentiation-inducing therapies in tendon repair. This study was designed to investigate the role of Mohawk homeobox (Mkx) in tenogenic differentiation and proliferation of hypoxic MSCs

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