Previous studies have demonstrated that passage in monolayer detrimentally affects the response of articular chondrocytes to the application of dynamic compression. Transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) is known to regulate metabolic processes in articular cartilage and can enhance the re-expression of a chondrocytic phenotype following monolayer expansion. The current study tests the hypothesis that TGFβ also modulates the response of monolayer-expanded human chondrocytes to the application of dynamic compression, via an integrin-mediated mechanotransduction process. The data presented demonstrate that TGFβ3 enhanced 35SO4 and [3H]thymidine incorporation and inhibited nitrite release after 48 h of culture when compared to unsupplemented constructs. Dynamic compression also enhanced 35SO4 and [3H]thymidine incorporation and inhibited nitrite release in the presence of TGFβ3. By contrast, dynamic compression did not alter these parameters in the absence of the growth factor. The addition of the peptide, GRGDSP, which acts as a competitive ligand for the α5β1 integrin, reversed the compression-induced stimulation of 35SO4 incorporation, [3H]thymidine incorporation, and suppression of nitrite release. No effect was observed when the control peptide, GRADSP, was used. The current data clearly demonstrate that the dynamic compression-induced changes observed in cell metabolism for human monolayer-expanded chondrocytes were dependent on the presence of TGFβ3 and are integrin-mediated.