| Literature DB >> 32095779 |
Sophia K Theodossiou1, Nathan R Schiele1.
Abstract
Tendons link muscle to bone and transfer forces necessary for normal movement. Tendon injuries can be debilitating and their intrinsic healing potential is limited. These challenges have motivated the development of model systems to study the factors that regulate tendon formation and tendon injury. Recent advances in understanding of embryonic and postnatal tendon formation have inspired approaches that aimed to mimic key aspects of tendon development. Model systems have also been developed to explore factors that regulate tendon injury and healing. We highlight current model systems that explore developmentally inspired cellular, mechanical, and biochemical factors in tendon formation and tenogenic stem cell differentiation. Next, we discuss in vivo, in vitro, ex vivo, and computational models of tendon injury that examine how mechanical loading and biochemical factors contribute to tendon pathologies and healing. These tendon development and injury models show promise for identifying the factors guiding tendon formation and tendon pathologies, and will ultimately improve regenerative tissue engineering strategies and clinical outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Computational models; Embryonic development; Engineered models; Growth factors; Injury; Mechanical loading; Stem cells; Tendon; Tissue engineering
Year: 2019 PMID: 32095779 PMCID: PMC7039524 DOI: 10.1186/s42490-019-0029-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biomed Eng ISSN: 2524-4426
Summary of developmental tendon models
| Developing Tendon Characteristics | Model Characteristics | Model Outcomes | References |
|---|---|---|---|
High cell density and low collagen content (Ansorge 2011) [ (Chaplin 1975) [ (Richardson 2007) [ (Schiele 2015) [ | Self-assembled cellular fibers | Upregulated expression of scleraxis and tenomodulin with loading; potential for scaffold-free, cellular self-assembly for single tendon fibers | Mubyana 2018 [ Schiele 2013 [ |
| Embryonic tendon cells in fibrin gels | Upregulated tendon genes and collagen synthesis; improved tendon formation in fibrin gel vs collagen gel models | Kalson 2010 [ Kapacee 2010 [ Yeung 2015 [ Breidenbach 2015 [ | |
| Cell-cell junction proteins (Cadherin-11 & N-Cadherin) (Richardson 2007) [ | Chick tendon explants, fibroblasts, and mouse MSCs | Possible regulators of early tendon tissue formation; N-cadherin and cadherin-11 levels decreased with tenogenic induction | Richardson 2007 [ Schiele 2013 [ Theodossiou 2019 [ |
TGFβ2&3 (Pryce 2009) [ (Kuo 2008) [ | Mouse embryonic tendon progenitor cells and fibroblasts, and MSCs | TGFβ2 increased scleraxis and tenomodulin expression | Pryce 2009 [ Brown 2014 [ Brown 2015 [ Havis 2014 [ Havis 2016 [ Chien 2018 [ |
| Mouse MSCs | TGFβ2 increased scleraxis and tenomodulin production; decreased N-cadherin and cadherin−11 production | Theodossiou 2019 [ | |
| Human BM-MNCs and MSCs in fibrin gels | TGFβ3 increased collagen fibril synthesis, and upregulated TGFβ3, Col I, and Smad2 | Kapacee 2010 [ | |
Scleraxis and mohawk (Schweitzer 2001) [ (Liu 2015) [ (Otabe 2015) [ (Shukunami 2018) [ | Scleraxis knockdown in equine embryonic stem cells, and fetal and adult tendon cells | Decreased expression of Col I, COMP, and Sox9, and reduced cell survival in embryonic stem cells and fetal tendon cells with scleraxis knockdown; adult tendon cells unaffected | Bavin 2017 [ |
| Scleraxis knockout in mice, and scleraxis knockdown in isolated rat tendon cells | Decreased or absent tenomodulin expression at P1 in scleraxis −/− mice; tenomodulin expression reduced to 17% of control by scleraxis knockdown in rat tendon cells | Shukunami 2018 [ | |
| Mohawk knockout in rats via CRISPR/Cas9 | Heterotropic mineralization of Achilles tendons and tendon hypoplasia in 3 and 4-week-old rats; increased expression of Col II, Runx2, Aggrecan, COMP, and osteopontin in patellar tendon cells | Suzuki 2016 [ | |
| Overexpression of mohawk and scleraxis in mouse MSCs and cell sheets | Increased expression of Col I, biglycan, Col III, Col V, Col XIV, decorin, fibromodulin, tenascin C, tenomodulin, and scleraxis via binding to the TGFβ2 promoter | Liu 2015 [ | |
| Overexpression of mohawk in human and mouse bone marrow-derived MSCs | Increased expression of Col I, tenomodulin, tenascin C, tenascin XB, scleraxis | Otabe 2015 [ | |
| Overexpression of scleraxis in human MSCs in a silk-collagen scaffold | Increased expression of tenogenic genes, cell alignment, and fibril diameter | Chen 2014 [ | |
FGF4 (Edom-Vovard 2002) [ (Brent 2005) [ (Havis 2014) [ | Mouse MSCs and chick limb explants | Species-specific scleraxis expression: decreased in mouse or increased in chick | Havis 2014 [ Havis 2016 [ |
| Mouse embryonic tendon progenitor cells and MSCs | No changes or decreased scleraxis expression | Brown 2014 [ Brown 2015 [ | |
BMPs (Lorda-Diez 2014) [ (Liu 2015) [ (Otabe 2015) [ | Chick progenitor mesodermal cells | Transient gene expression determines response to BMP isoforms | Lorda Diez 2014 [ |
| Human bone marrow-derived MSCs | BMP-12 increased mohawk, scleraxis, Col I, tenascin XB, and decorin expression | Otabe 2015 [ | |
LOX and Mechanical Stimuli (Marturano 2013) [ (Pan 2018) [ | Embryonic chick tendon and limb explants | Paralysis decreased elastic modulus and LOX, hypermotility increased LOX and elastic modulus, LOX inhibition decreased elastic modulus | Pan 2018 [ |
Lengthening/slow stretching (Hamburger & Hamilton 1951) [ | Embryonic chick tendon cells in fibrin gels stretched 2 mm/day | Increased collagen fibril diameter, packing volume, and stiffness | Kalson 2011 [ |
Elastic modulus (Marturano 2013) [ | RGD-functionalized alginate gels with embryonic-mimicking elastic modulus | Scleraxis, Col XII, and Col I gene expression regulated by elastic modulus | Marturano 2016 [ |
Progressive mineralization of tendon to bone attachment (Thomopoulos 2010) [ | FEA model of cell- and tissue-level stress concentrations | Cell-level stresses much higher than tissue-level stresses; higher stresses may drive enthesis formation | Liu 2014 [ |
Fig. 1Embryonic tendon and a cellular fiber model. a E11 chick calcaneal tendons have high cell density and an organized actin cytoskeleton network. Actin cytoskeleton (green) and cell nuclei (blue) show actin filaments in embryonic tendon that appear to form a continuous network between adjacent cells. Scale bar = 10 μm. b A self-assembled cellular tendon fiber to mimic the high cell density of embryonic tendon, following 7 days of mechanical loading in vitro. Actin cytoskeleton (red) and cell nuclei (blue) show high cellularity, actin stress fiber organization and nuclear elongation. Scale bar = 100 μm. a reprinted with permission by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. from Schiele et al. 2015 [29]. b reprinted with permission by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. from Mubyana & Corr 2018 [34]
Fig. 2Stretch influences collagen fibril formation in an embryonic tendon model. Transmission electron microscopy images of fibrin gel tendon constructs seeded with embryonic chick metatarsal tendon cells at day 0 (T0), and after 4 days (T4) with and without stretching. Slow stretching (2 mm/day) increased collagen organization and collagen fibril packing volume in this in vitro model of embryonic tendon formation. Scale bar = 250 nm. Figure reprinted with permission by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. from Kalson et al. 2011 [56]
Summary of tendon injury models
| Injured Tendon Characteristics | Model Characteristics | Model Outcomes | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overuse injury | Downhill running in rats | Induced overuse injury in the supraspinatus | Soslowsky 2000 [ Archaumbault 2006 [ |
| Bipedal downhill running in rats | Reduced stiffness and tensile strength; localized disintegration of collagen bundles | Ng 2011 [ | |
| Uphill running in rats | Achilles tendons adapted to loading; no observable pathology | Heinemeier 2012 [ Dirks 2013 [ | |
| Transection/Acute injury | Neonatal and adult mouse Achilles tendons | Regeneration observed in neonates, but not adults | Howell 2017 [ |
| Mouse supraspinatus tendons with full and partial transections | Different cell populations involved in healing of full versus partial injury; distinct cell lineages participate in healing response | Moser 2018 [ Yoshida 2016 [ | |
| Rat Achilles tendon partial transection repaired with scaffolds | Cells in scaffolds expressed mohawk during repair | Otabe 2015 [ | |
| Mouse Achilles tendon full transections repaired with MSC sheets overexpressing mohawk | Mohawk-overexpressing MSC sheets resulted in increased collagen fibril diameter, visible crimp, increased stiffness, elastic modulus, maximum force and stress, and energy absorbed | Liu 2015 [ | |
| Canine digital flexor tendons | Following injury, IL-1β upregulated 4000-fold, MMP-13 upregulated 24,000-fold | Manning 2014 [ | |
| IL-1β treatment | E15 and P7 mouse tendon cells treated with IL-1β | Higher expression of IL-6, TNFα, COX2, MMP-3 and MMP-13 in P7 compared to E15 | Li 2019 [ |
| Human patellar tendon fibroblasts treated with IL-1β and strain | IL-1β and 8% strain upregulated MMP-1, COX2, and PGE2; IL-1β and 4% strain downregulated expression of MMP-1, COX2, and PGE2 compared to 8% strain | Yang 2005 [ | |
| Adult and fetal equine tendon cells, and equine embryonic stem cells treated with IL-1β | Adult and fetal tendon cells upregulated MMP-1, −2, −3, −8, −9, and − 13, tenascin-C, Sox9, and downregulated scleraxis and COMP, compared to embryonic stem cells | McClellan 2019 [ | |
| Genetic knockouts | Tenomodulin knockout mice with transected and repaired Achilles tendons | Downregulation of Col I, tenascin-C, thrombospondin 2, and TGFβ1; upregulation of scleraxis, COMP, and proteoglycan 4 | Lin 2017 [ |
| GDF-5 knockout mice subjected to Achilles tendon injury | Delayed healing and increased adipocytes in knockouts | Chhabra 2003 [ | |
| Decorin-null and biglycan-null mice subjected to full thickness, partial width patellar tendon injury in adult and aged groups | Smaller diameter collagen fibrils, decreased cell density, and altered cell shape and collagen alignment in knockouts; biglycan influenced early healing, decorin influenced late healing | Dunkman 2014 [ Dunkman 2014 [ | |
| Chronic Injury/Induced Tendinopathy | Transection or Botox-unloading of rat Achilles tendon | Irreversible loss of scleraxis expression with transection; partial loss and return of scleraxis with Botox | Maeda 2011 [ |
| Immediate or delayed repair of rat rotator cuff injury | Delayed repair had worse outcomes than immediate repair | Killian 2014 [ | |
| TGFβ1 injection to rat Achilles | Warburg pathway, hypoxic, angiogenic, and glycolytic metabolism gene activation | Sikes 2018 [ | |
| Collagenase injection in rat Achilles tendon | Increased IL-6 and MMP-9 in senescence-accelerated rats compared to senescence-resistant rats | Ueda 2019 [ | |
| Carrageenan injection in rat patellar tendon; treatment with IL-1 receptor antagonist | Carrageenan decreased tendon length, and increased MMP activity and inflammation. Inflammation absent with IL-1 receptor antagonist | Berkoff 2016 [ | |
| Ex vivo Loading | Stress deprivation in rat tail tendons | Increased MMP-13 expression | Arnoczky 2007 [ |
| Stress deprivation in rat tail tendons | Stress deprivation decreased TIMP/MMP ratio; loading increased TIMP/MMP ratio | Gardner 2008 [ | |
| Fatigue loading of rat flexor digitorum longus tendon loaded at low (6.0–7.0%), moderate (8.5–9.5%), and high (11.0–12.0%) tensile strain | Isolated fiber deformations at low strain; fiber dissociation and localized rupture, decreased stiffness, and increased hysteresis at high strain | Fung 2009 [ | |
| Equine flexor and extensor tendon cells subjected to 10% biaxial cyclic loading | Collagen synthesis, proliferation, COMP expression as a function of tendon type | Goodman 2004 [ | |
| Equine superficial digital flexor tendon fascicles cyclically loaded from 2–12% uniaxial strain and 1800 cycles | Increased expression of IL-6, COX2, C1, C2, and MMP-13 | Thorpe 2015 [ | |
| Bovine deep digital flexor tendons cyclically loaded from 1 to 10% strain | Collagen fiber disruption, kinks, and interfascicular network damage, and expression of IL-6, COX2, MMP-1, 3, and 13 | Spiesz 2015 [ | |
| Mouse patellar tendon cells isolated from 3-week old mohawk knockouts and subjected to 4% cyclic tensile loading | Increased chondrogenic gene expression (Col II, Aggrecan, COMP) | Suzuki 2016 [ | |
| Computational models | Cell- and tissue-level responses to strain simulated via Hill functions | Tissue-level response similar at low and high strain conditions | Mehdizadeh 2017 [ |
| Hill-type equations of human Achilles-soleus unit | Proteolytic damage leads to collagen fiber shortening; mechanical damage lengthens fibers | Young 2016 [ | |
| Regression model of healing | Multiple differential predictors of early development and early developmental healing; however, no differential predictors of late development and late developmental healing | Ansorge 2012 [ | |
| 2D FEA simulation of “jumper’s knee” in Patellar tendon | Highest localized strain predicted successfully | Lavagnino 2008 [ | |
| Agent-based model of collagen fibril alignment with applications in tendon loading during healing | Peak collagen alignment occurs at lower strain level than peak deposition; peak deposition occurs above damage threshhold | Richardson 2018 [ | |
| Multiscale OpenSim model of cellular responses to various loading parameters | Single set of cellular response curves explained tendon behavior observed in several different experiments | Chen 2018 [ | |
| Empirical model of patellar tendon response to aging and injury | Effects of aging and injury on patellar tendon mechanical properties predicted by damage models | Buckley 2013 [ | |
| Empirical model of Achilles tendon response to decorin and biglycan knockout in aging mice | Model predicted changes in dynamic modulus resulting from decorin and biglycan knockout | Gordon 2015 [ |
Fig. 3Mechanical loading impacts ex vivo tendon damage. Ex vivo static (a) and cyclically loaded (b, c) bovine flexor tendon fascicles immunostained for inflammatory markers IL-6 (red) and COX-2 (green), and co-labeled for cell nuclei (DAPI, blue). Fascicles and the interfascicular matrix of the loaded samples show damage (white ellipses), with collagen fiber kinks and interfascicular matrix disruption. IL-6 and COX-2 are found in loaded samples only, with COX-2 expression increasing with cycle number. Scale bar = 10 μm. Figure reprinted under a Creative Commons Attribution License from Spiesz et al. 2015 [147]
Fig. 4Computational modeling of cell- and tissue-level secretion profiles for inflammatory mediators in response to strain. TGFβ1 (a) and IL-1β (b) profiles were predicted by a Hill-equation model for individual cells, the elementary cell response (ECR), and for cells in the whole tendon, tissue-level response (TLR). In the TLR, the secretion profile is U-shaped, as both low and high strain lead to a simulated “unloading” response of the tissue. Low tendon strain is “underuse” and high tendon strain leads to collagen fiber rupture and unloading of the cells. Figure reprinted with permission by Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg from Mehdizadeh et al. 2017 [133]