Abstract

The effect of mechanical load on tendinopathic tissue is usually studied in the context of identifying mechanisms responsible for tendon degradation. However, loading is also one of the most common treatments for tendinopathy. It is therefore possible that different loads result in different cellular responses within a tendon. To test this hypothesis, we first established a rodent model of tendinopathy that has a transcriptional signature similar to human tendinopathy. Tendinopathy was modeled in the rat by producing a lesion in the central core of the patellar tendon using a biopsy punch, followed by two weeks to allow scar formation. We performed 3’ Tag RNA-Seq to identify genes that were differentially expressed between the native and scarred rat patellar tendon. Genes involved in extracellular matrix (ECM) structure and turnover were increased, mitochondrial genes were decreased, and there was no inflammatory signature in the tendinopathic tissue. These transcriptional changes phenocopy previously published whole transcriptome analysis in human tendinopathy. After validating the model, the initial response to injury and loading was determined. Two weeks after creation of the patellar tendon lesion, the tendon was loaded using either 4 × 30s isometric or a time-under-tension matched (360 × 0.33s) dynamic protocol. Injured +/- loading and contralateral control tendons were collected eighteen hours after loading, RNA was extracted, and gene expression was quantified using qRT-PCR of the scar with or without loading. The expression of scleraxis and type I collagen increased following isometric loading relative to those loaded dynamically. By contrast, the expression of type II collagen increased in the dynamic samples relative to those loaded isometrically. These data suggest that dynamic loading of a central core tendon injury increases fibrocartilage markers, whereas long isometric loads stimulate markers of tendon regeneration.

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