Migration and healing of ligament cells under inflammatory conditions
β Scribed by Jeanine Witkowski; Li Yang; Douglas J. Wood; K-L. Paul Sung
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 904 KB
- Volume
- 15
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0736-0266
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
It is well documented that the adult human medial collateral ligament has a functional healing response, whereas the anterior cruciate ligament does not. The differential healing responses of the medial collateral and anterior cruciate ligaments could be due to factors caused by different biological conditions and locations in vivo. In addition, different intrinsic properties of the constituent cells of these ligaments may contribute to their different healing abilities. Ligament healing follows an orderly process of hemorrhage, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. At the cellular level, healing involves a cell's detachment from and attachment to the matrix adjacent to the wound area, migration, and proliferation. This study sought to investigate whether, during migration, the responses of the medial collateral and anterior cruciate ligament fibroblasts are intrinsically different under the same inflammatory conditions. Human medial collateral arid anterior cruciate ligament fibroblast cells were cultured, and in vitro wounds were simulated by streaking the cells with an inoculating loop, creating a cellβfree area. The migration of the cells into this gap, thus filling the cellβfree area, was observed. Two sets of experiments were conducted; one varied the wound width and the, other added the inflammatory factors tumor necrosis factorβa, complement C5a, and lipopolysaccharide the width of the wound increased, the rate of recovery decreased for both types of ligament cells (slope: anterior cruciate ligament, 0.13 hour/ΞΌm and medial collateral ligament, 0.10 hour/ΞΌm). Also, the three inflammatory factors used all inhibited the recovery rates of both ligaments to ones that were 1.4β2.3 times slower than controls. However, in both sets of experiments, the anterior cruciate ligament fibroblasts were more sensitive to inflammatory factors, and the medial collateral ligament fibroblasts had faster recovery rates (anterior cruciate ligament, 1.2β3.4 times slower than rates for medial collateral ligament fibroblasts, excluding those under lipopolysaccharide treatment). The results showed that medial collateral and anterior cruciate ligament fibroblasts responded differently under the same inflammatory conditions. This may suggest that these differences in intrinsic properties contribute to their different healing responses and abilities.
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