Characterization of plasma fibronectin for migration, proliferation and differentiation on human articular chondrocytes.

JOURNAL OF TISSUE ENGINEERING AND REGENERATIVE MEDICINE(2019)

引用 2|浏览3
暂无评分
摘要
Plasma fibronectin (pFN) plays a crucial role in wound healing by binding to integrins and inducing cell migration. It is known to induce the migration and proliferation of mesenchymal progenitor cells in vitro, which play a key role during microfracture in cartilage repair. Endogenous chondrocytes from the native cartilage of the defect rim might aid in cartilage repair. In this study, the effect of pFN on proliferation, migration, and differentiation was tested on human articular chondrocytes. Results showed that treatment with pFN increased the migration of chondrocytes in a range of 1-30g/ml as tested with no effect on proliferation. TGF3-induced chondrogenesis was not affected by pFN. Especially, gene expression of matrix metalloproteinases was not increased by pFN. Plasma FN fragmentation due to storage conditions could be excluded by SDS-PAGE. Moreover, bioactivity of pFN did not alter during storage at 4 degrees C and 40 degrees C for up to 14days. Taken together, pFN induces the migration but not proliferation of human articular chondrocytes with no inhibitory effect on chondrogenic differentiation. Additionally, no loss of activity or fragmentation of pFN was observed after lyophilization and storage, making pFN an interesting bioactive factor for chondrocyte recruitment.
更多
查看译文
关键词
differentiation,human articular chondrocytes,migration,plasma fibronectin,polyglycolic acid,proliferation
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要