| Literature DB >> 25446135 |
Denitsa Docheva1, Sebastian A Müller2, Martin Majewski2, Christopher H Evans3.
Abstract
Tendon injuries are common and present a clinical challenge to orthopedic surgery mainly because these injuries often respond poorly to treatment and require prolonged rehabilitation. Therapeutic options used to repair ruptured tendons have consisted of suture, autografts, allografts, and synthetic prostheses. To date, none of these alternatives has provided a successful long-term solution, and often the restored tendons do not recover their complete strength and functionality. Unfortunately, our understanding of tendon biology lags far behind that of other musculoskeletal tissues, thus impeding the development of new treatment options for tendon conditions. Hence, in this review, after introducing the clinical significance of tendon diseases and the present understanding of tendon biology, we describe and critically assess the current strategies for enhancing tendon repair by biological means. These consist mainly of applying growth factors, stem cells, natural biomaterials and genes, alone or in combination, to the site of tendon damage. A deeper understanding of how tendon tissue and cells operate, combined with practical applications of modern molecular and cellular tools could provide the long awaited breakthrough in designing effective tendon-specific therapeutics and overall improvement of tendon disease management.Entities:
Keywords: Cell-based therapy; Embryonic stem cells; Gene therapy; Growth Factors; Mesenchymal stem cells; Natural biomaterials; Tendon; Tendon repair; Tendon-derived cells
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25446135 PMCID: PMC4519231 DOI: 10.1016/j.addr.2014.11.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Drug Deliv Rev ISSN: 0169-409X Impact factor: 15.470
Fig. 1A schematic drawing of basic tendon structure. The collagen molecules are organized hierarchically in fibrils, fibers and fascicles. The cellular content is dominated by the tenocytes, which are terminally differentiated cells. Tendons contain stem and progenitor cell populations, whose exact location is still debated (therefore indicated with a?). Different sheets, endotenon and epitenon (loose connective tissues), and paratenon (fatty areolar tissue) are shown as well as blood vessels and nerves.
Based on [227].
Fig. 2The tendon repair process in humans. The healing of ruptured tendons passes through three main phases containing distinctive cell and molecular cascades. These phases overlap and their duration depends upon the location and severity of the tendon injury. Currently, the tendon research field is actively exploring the use of growth factors, genes, stem cells and biomaterials, alone or in various combinations, for enhancing tendon healing. Mostly, the appropriate times of application are in the first two stages (indicated by white arrows), and depend on the type of growth factors, genes, stem cells or biomaterials implemented. Based on [47].
Fig. 3Key molecular, cellular and matrix changes occurring during the three main phases of tendon repair. Each healing stage is characterized by involvement of different growth factors, activation of certain cell types and production of essential matrix proteins, which collectively contribute to the replacement of the initial fibrous tissue with more a tendonous regenerate. Based on [45,46].
Fig. 4Studies on the use of biologics for tendon repair. Article counts were carried out after searching in PubMed using the following key words: tendon repair/healing in combination with growth factors, stem cells, biomaterials and gene therapy. The articles include in vivo and in vitro studies, and some articles scored in more then one category. The search results demonstrate that in the last decade the tendon research field has progressively expanded as represented by the continuous increase in the number of articles focusing on different strategies for enhancing tendon tissue healing. Such cumulative efforts may lead to the development of efficient biologics for tendon repair.
Summary of in vitro and in vivo studies on growth factors.
| Growth | Tendon | Type of study | Model | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| bFGF | Flexor tendon | In vitro | Canine | [ |
| Flexor tendon | In vitro | Canine | [ | |
| Flexor tendon | In vitro | Rabbit | [ | |
| Patellar tendon | In vitro | Rat | [ | |
| Supraspinatus tendon | In vivo | Rat | [ | |
| BMP 12 | Achilles tendon | In vivo | Rat | [ |
| BMP 2 | Flexor tendon | In vitro | Canine | [ |
| Extensor tendon | In vivo | Canine | [ | |
| Flexor tendon | In vivo | Rabbit | [ | |
| Infraspintatus tendon | In vivo | Rabbit | [ | |
| BMP 2, 7, 12 | Infraspinatus tendon | In vivo | Sheep | [ |
| IGF | Flexor tendon | In vitro | Rabbit | [ |
| Flexor tendon | In vitro | Rabbit | [ | |
| Flexor tendon | In vitro | Rabbit | [ | |
| Rotator cuff | In vitro | Rat | [ | |
| PDGF | Flexor tendon | In vivo | Canine | [ |
| Flexor tendon | In vitro | Canine | [ | |
| Flexor tendon | In vitro | Canine | [ | |
| Flexor and peroneal tendon | In vitro | Rabbit | [ | |
| Flexor tendon | In vitro | Rabbit | [ | |
| Patellar tendon | In vitro | Rat | [ | |
| Rotator cuff | In vitro | Rat | [ | |
| Rotator cuff | In vivo | Sheep | [ | |
| Medial femuro-tibial ligament | Iv vivo | Rat | [ | |
| TGFβ | Patellar tendon | In vivo | Rabbit | [ |
| Achilles tendon | In vivo | Rat | [ | |
| Flexor tendon | In vitro | Rabbit | [ | |
| Flexor tendon | In vitro | Rabbit | [ | |
| Flexor tendon | In vivo/in vitro | Rabbit | [ | |
| Achilles tendon | In vivo | Rat | [ | |
| Flexor tendon | In vitro | Rabbit | [ | |
| Flexor tendon | In vivo | Rat | [ | |
| Flexor tendon | In vivo | Murine | [ | |
| TGFβ1 | Flexor tendon | In vitro | Murine | [ |
| Flexor tendon | In vivo | Murine | [ | |
| TGFβ1, 2, 3 | Infraspinatus tendon | In vivo | Sheep | [ |
| VEGF | Flexor tendon | In vitro | Canine | [ |
| Flexor tendon | In vitro | Canine | [ | |
| Flexor tendon | In vitro | Canine | [ | |
| Flexor tendon | In vitro | Rabbit | [ | |
| ACS | Achilles tendon | In vivo | Rat | [ |
| PRP | Achilles tendon | In vivo/In vitro | Rat | [ |
| Flexor tendon | In vitro | Equine | [ | |
| Flexor tendon | In vivo | Equine | [ | |
| Review | In vivo | Human | [ | |
| Review | In vivo | Human | [ | |
| Review | In vivo | Human | [ |
Tendon repair with bone marrow-derived MSC.
| Tendon type | Model | Conclusion | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Achilles | Rat; surgical cut; MSCs cultured at hypoxic and normoxic conditions, | Superior biomechanical testing in tendons treated with MSC cultured in | [ |
| Rat; surgical cut and enthesis destroyed; suture and MSC injection; | Improved healing and biomechanical properties; enthesis comparable | [ | |
| Rat; surgical cut; total BM cell or MSC injection in DMEM; | Biomechanical properties of tendon treated with BM cells comparable | [ | |
| Rabbit; surgical transection; MSC-fibrin; follow up at 1, 3, | At 3 weeks improved histological and biomechanical properties with no | [ | |
| Rabbit; surgical transection; knitted poly-lactide-co-glycolide scaffold | Higher rate of tissue formation and remodeling was observed early on | [ | |
| Rabbit; hallucis longus tendons transfered into calcaneal bone tunnel; | Improved healing of the insertion of tendon to bone in the early stage | [ | |
| Rabbit; surgical cut; MSCs in collagen gel; analysis at 12 weeks | Constructs with lower cell density displayed superior biomechanical | [ | |
| Rabbit; surgical transection; MSC-collagen implants; analysis at 4, | Improved collagen organization and increased load properties | [ | |
| Patellar | Rat; surgical transection; MSCs with fibrin injection; analysis at 10 | Biomechanical properties were not significantly improved but tendons | [ |
| Rat; surgical full thickness window defect; MSCs with fibrin injection; | More dense collagen fibers, higher cellularity and matrix without ectopic | [ | |
| Rabbit; surgical cut; MSCs in dog decellularized tendon composites; | MSC survived in multilayer composite and expressed tendon phenotype | [ | |
| Rabbit; surgical cut; MSCs in a gel-sponge composite; | Superior cellular alignment, but maximum force and stress compared to | [ | |
| Rabbit; surgical defect; MSCs from young and aged rabbits in collagen | No significant difference in biomechanical properties of tendons treated | [ | |
| Rabbit; surgical cut; implanted MSCs; analysis at 2, 3, 5 and 8 weeks | MSC survived and differentiated into tendon-like spindle cells | [ | |
| Rabbit; surgical cut; MSC-collagen implants; analysis at 6, | Ectopic ossification developed in approx. 25% of the tendons with | [ | |
| Rabbit; surgical cut; MSCs in collagen gel; analysis at 4 weeks | Better biomechanical properties but no significant improvement of | [ | |
| Superficial | Horse; naturally-occurring tendon injury; MSCs with marrow | Treated group exhibited normalization on a biochemical, morphological | [ |
| Horse; collagenase-induced tendinitis lesion; MSC injection; | Increased tensile stiffness in MSC-treated group, but similar histological | [ | |
| Horse; collagenase-induced tendinitis lesion; MSC injection | Repaired tendon architecture comparable to healthy tendon | [ |
Salient properties of vectors used in experimental studies of tendon healing.
| Vector | Key properties | Advantages | Disadvantages | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adenovirus | Non-integrating | Straightforward | Inflammatory | Widely used in clinical trials |
| Adeno-Associated | Recombinant AAV is | Transduces non-dividing | Difficult to produce | Possible to engineer AAV with double |
| Retrovirus | RNA genome | Straightforward to produce | Transduction requires host cell division | Usually used in ex vivo gene delivery |
| Lentivirus | RNA genome | Transduces non-dividing | Risk of insertional mutagenesis, but | Increasing use in clinical trials |
Use of gene transfer to promote tenogenesis in animal models of tendon injury.
| Gene | Vector | Delivery mode | Animal model | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BMP-14/GDF-5 | Adenovirus | In vivo | Rat, Achilles | [ |
| Adenovirus | In vivo | Rat, Achilles | [ | |
| AAV | In vivo | Mouse, flexor tendon | [ | |
| BMP-13/GDF-6 | Adenovirus | Ex vivo/MSC | Rat, rotator cuff | [ |
| BMP-12/GDF-7 | Adenovirus | In vivo | Chick, flexor tendon | [ |
| Adenovirus | Ex vivo/muscle | Rat, Achilles | [ | |
| TGFβ, VEGF | Adenovirus | Ex vivo/MSC | Rabbit, Achilles | [ |
| TGFβ | Adenovirus | Ex vivo/muscle | Rat, Achilles | [ |
| Scleraxis | Adenovirus | Ex vivo/MSC | Rat, superspinatus | [ |
| SMAD8, BMP-2 | Liposome | Ex vivo/MSC | Rat, Achilles | [ |
| bFGF | AAV | In vivo | Chick, flexor tendon | [ |
| PDGF-B | Liposome | In vivo | Rat, patellar tendon | [ |
| Nanoparticle | In vivo | Rat, Achilles Tendon | [ | |
| Retrovirus | Ex vivo/tendon | Rat, rotator cuff | [ | |
| Interleukin-10 | Lentivirus | In vivo | Mouse, patellar | [ |
Use of gene transfer to address additional aspects of tendinopathy.
| Gene | Vector | Delivery mode | Species, indication | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sox-9 | Adenovirus | In vivo | Rabbit, bone–tendon junction | [ |
| IGF-1 | Adenovirus | Ex vivo/MSC | Horse, tendinitis | [ |
| BMP-4 | Lentivirus | In vivo | Rat, tendon insertion site | [ |
| BMP-2 | Adenovirus | In vivo | Rabbit, tendon insertion site | [ |
| MT1-MMP | Adenovirus | Ex vivo/MSC | Rat, tendon insertion site | [ |
| siRNA-Runx2 | Adenovirus | In vivo | Mouse, heterotopic ossification | [ |
| siRNA-Runx2, SMAD4 | Adenovirus | In vivo | Rat, hetertopic ossification | [ |
| shRNA-Decorin | Lentivirus | Ex vivo/tendon cells | Rat, patellar tendon | [ |