The mechanical microenvironment of high concentration agarose for applying deformation to primary chondrocytes

Abstract Cartilage and chondrocytes experience loading that causes alterations in chondrocyte biological activity. In vivo c hondrocytes are surrounded by a pericellular matrix with a stiffness of ~25–200 kPa. Understanding the mechanical loading environment of the chondrocyte is of substantial inte...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of biomechanics 2014-06, Vol.47 (9), p.2143-2148
Hauptverfasser: Zignego, Donald L, Jutila, Aaron A, Gelbke, Martin K, Gannon, Daniel M, June, Ronald K
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Cartilage and chondrocytes experience loading that causes alterations in chondrocyte biological activity. In vivo c hondrocytes are surrounded by a pericellular matrix with a stiffness of ~25–200 kPa. Understanding the mechanical loading environment of the chondrocyte is of substantial interest for understanding chondrocyte mechanotransduction. The first objective of this study was to analyze the spatial variability of applied mechanical deformations in physiologically stiff agarose on cellular and sub-cellular length scales. Fluorescent microspheres were embedded in physiologically stiff agarose hydrogels. Microsphere positions were measured via confocal microscopy and used to calculate displacement and strain fields as a function of spatial position. The second objective was to assess the feasibility of encapsulating primary human chondrocytes in physiologically stiff agarose. The third objective was to determine if primary human chondrocytes could deform in high-stiffness agarose gels. Primary human chondrocyte viability was assessed using live–dead imaging following 24 and 72 h in tissue culture. Chondrocyte shape was measured before and after application of 10% compression. These data indicate that (1) displacement and strain precision are ~1% and 6.5% respectively, (2) high-stiffness agarose gels can maintain primary human chondrocyte viability of >95%, and (3) compression of chondrocytes in 4.5% agarose can induce shape changes indicative of cellular compression. Overall, these results demonstrate the feasibility of using high-concentration agarose for applying in vitro compression to chondrocytes as a model for understanding how chondrocytes respond to in vivo loading.
ISSN:0021-9290
1873-2380
DOI:10.1016/j.jbiomech.2013.10.051