| Literature DB >> 33302563 |
Filippo Randelli1, Patrizia Sartori2, Cristiano Carlomagno3, Marzia Bedoni3, Alessandra Menon2,4, Elena Vezzoli2, Michele Sommariva2, Nicoletta Gagliano2.
Abstract
Mechanotransduction is the ability of cells to translate mechanical stimuli into biochemical signals that can ultimately influence gene expression, cell morphology and cell fate. Tenocytes are responsible for tendon mechanical adaptation converting mechanical stimuli imposed during mechanical loading, thus affecting extracellular matrix homeostasis. Since we previously demonstrated that MD-Tissue, an injectable collagen-based medical compound containing swine-derived collagen as the main component, is able to affect tenocyte properties, the aim of this study was to analyze whether the effects triggered by MD-Tissue were based on mechanotransduction-related mechanisms. For this purpose, MD-Tissue was used to coat Petri dishes and cytochalasin B was used to deprive tenocytes of mechanical stimulation mediated by the actin cytoskeleton. Cell morphology, migration, collagen turnover pathways and the expression of key mechanosensors were analyzed by morphological and molecular methods. Our findings confirm that MD-Tissue affects collagen turnover pathways and favors cell migration and show that the MD-Tissue-induced effect represents a mechanical input involving the mechanotransduction machinery. Overall, MD-Tissue, acting as a mechanical scaffold, could represent an effective medical device for a novel therapeutic, regenerative and rehabilitative approach to favor tendon healing in tendinopathies.Entities:
Keywords: YAP/TAZ; actin cytoskeleton; collagen turnover; mechanotransduction; medical device; tendinopathy; tendon; tenocytes
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33302563 PMCID: PMC7763591 DOI: 10.3390/cells9122641
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600