Literature DB >> 8809069

Contributions of fluid convection and electrical migration to transport in cartilage: relevance to loading.

A M Garcia1, E H Frank, P E Grimshaw, A J Grodzinsky.   

Abstract

We have studied the contributions of diffusion, fluid flow and electrical migration to molecular transport through adult articular cartilage explants using neutral and charged solutes that were either radiolabeled (3H2O, [35S]sulfate, [3H]thymidine, [3H]raffinose, and a synthetic matrix metalloproteinase inhibitor) or fluorescently tagged (NSPA and Lissamine-dextran). In order to induce fluid flow within the cartilage matrix without mechanical deformation, electric current densities were applied across cartilage disks. These currents produced electroosmotic fluid velocities of 1-2 microns/s, magnitudes that have been reported to exist during joint loading in vivo. This fluid convection enhanced neutral solute flux relative to passive diffusion alone by a factor that increased with the size of the solute. While the enhancement factor for 3H2O was 2.3-fold, that for [3H]raffinose (594 Da) and similar sized neutral solutes was 10-fold, suggesting that the effect of fluid flow is important even for small solutes. The largest enhancement (25-fold) was seen for the neutral 10-kDa Lissamine-dextran, confirming that fluid convection is most important for large solutes. We also studied the electrophoretic contribution to solute flux, which is relevant to the presence of intratissue streaming potentials induced during loading in vivo. Using the negatively charged [35S]sulfate ion with a range of current densities, as much as a 10-fold enhancement in flux was observed. Values for the intrinsic transport properties of the solutes (e.g., diffusivity, electrical mobility, hydrodynamic hindrance factor) can be obtained from the data.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8809069     DOI: 10.1006/abbi.1996.0397

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Biochem Biophys        ISSN: 0003-9861            Impact factor:   4.013


  24 in total

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2.  Convection and diffusion in charged hydrated soft tissues: a mixture theory approach.

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3.  Three-dimensional inhomogeneous triphasic finite-element analysis of physical signals and solute transport in human intervertebral disc under axial compression.

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4.  Tensorial electrokinetics in articular cartilage.

Authors:  Boris Reynaud; Thomas M Quinn
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2006-06-23       Impact factor: 4.033

5.  Effects of tension-compression nonlinearity on solute transport in charged hydrated fibrous tissues under dynamic unconfined compression.

Authors:  Chun-Yuh Huang; Wei Yong Gu
Journal:  J Biomech Eng       Date:  2007-06       Impact factor: 2.097

6.  Effect of mechanical loading on electrical conductivity in porcine TMJ discs.

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7.  Transport and equilibrium uptake of a peptide inhibitor of PACE4 into articular cartilage is dominated by electrostatic interactions.

Authors:  Sangwon Byun; Micky D Tortorella; Anne-Marie Malfait; Kam Fok; Eliot H Frank; Alan J Grodzinsky
Journal:  Arch Biochem Biophys       Date:  2010-05-04       Impact factor: 4.013

8.  Three-dimensional in vitro effects of compression and time in culture on aggregate modulus and on gene expression and protein content of collagen type II in murine chondrocytes.

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Journal:  Tissue Eng Part A       Date:  2009-10       Impact factor: 3.845

9.  Comparison and evaluation of biomechanical, electrical, and biological methods for assessment of damage to tissue collagen.

Authors:  R Glenn Hepfer; Kelvin G M Brockbank; Zhen Chen; Elizabeth D Greene; Lia H Campbell; Gregory J Wright; Alyce Linthurst-Jones; Hai Yao
Journal:  Cell Tissue Bank       Date:  2016-04-29       Impact factor: 1.522

10.  Differential morphology and homogeneity of tissue-engineered cartilage in hydrodynamic cultivation with transient exposure to insulin-like growth factor-1 and transforming growth factor-β1.

Authors:  Yueh-Hsun Yang; Gilda A Barabino
Journal:  Tissue Eng Part A       Date:  2013-06-19       Impact factor: 3.845

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