Abstract

BackgroundIt has been demonstrated that frequency modulation of loading influences cellular response and metabolism in 3D tissues such as cartilage, bone and intervertebral disc. However, the mechano-sensitivity of cells in linear tissues such as tendons or ligaments might be more sensitive to changes in strain amplitude than frequency. Here, we hypothesized that tenocytes in situ are mechano-responsive to random amplitude modulation of strain.MethodsWe compared stochastic amplitude-modulated versus sinusoidal cyclic stretching. Rabbit tendon were kept in tissue-culture medium for twelve days and were loaded for 1h/day for six of the total twelve culture days. The tendons were randomly subjected to one of three different loading regimes: i) stochastic (2 – 7% random strain amplitudes), ii) cyclic_RMS (2–4.42% strain) and iii) cyclic_high (2 - 7% strain), all at 1 Hz and for 3,600 cycles, and one unloaded control.ResultsAt the end of the culture period, the stiffness of the “stochastic” group was significantly lower than that of the cyclic_RMS and cyclic_high groups (both, p < 0.0001). Gene expression of eleven anabolic, catabolic and inflammatory genes revealed no significant differences between the loading groups.ConclusionsWe conclude that, despite an equivalent metabolic response, stochastically stretched tendons suffer most likely from increased mechanical microdamage, relative to cyclically loaded ones, which is relevant for tendon regeneration therapies in clinical practice.

Highlights

  • It has been demonstrated that frequency modulation of loading influences cellular response and metabolism in 3D tissues such as cartilage, bone and intervertebral disc

  • Proliferation and cell activity, i.e. DNA content and Alamar blue assay, both confirmed that the tenocytes were metabolically active and alive

  • The "cyclic_high" group showed a slight decrease of DNA content, whereas the tendons in the other groups showed similar cell activity, but no significant difference could be found

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Summary

Introduction

It has been demonstrated that frequency modulation of loading influences cellular response and metabolism in 3D tissues such as cartilage, bone and intervertebral disc. Smooth and regular amplitudes do not reflect the situation in vivo This has been demonstrated in in vivo gate analysis in rabbit, a common model selected for tendon studies, which revealed that the frequency in “relaxed” hopping is approximately 1Hz but [14] variable. Another study used the rabbit flexor digitorum profundus model for flexor tendon tissue engineering, where the authors found bioreactor cyclic strain increases construct strength [15]. This rabbit tendon has been successfully evaluated for a model system for the study of tendon mechano-biology multiple times in the literature [5,14]

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