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Bonding of articular cartilage using a combination of biochemical degradation and surface cross-linking

After trauma, articular cartilage often does not heal due to incomplete bonding of the fractured surfaces. In this study we investigated the ability of chemical cross-linkers to facilitate bonding of articular cartilage, either alone or in combination with a pre-treatment with surface-degrading agen...

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Autores principales: Englert, Carsten, Blunk, Torsten, Müller, Rainer, von Glasser, Sabine Schulze, Baumer, Julia, Fierlbeck, Johann, Heid, Iris M, Nerlich, Michael, Hammer, Joachim
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2206351/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17504533
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/ar2202
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author Englert, Carsten
Blunk, Torsten
Müller, Rainer
von Glasser, Sabine Schulze
Baumer, Julia
Fierlbeck, Johann
Heid, Iris M
Nerlich, Michael
Hammer, Joachim
author_facet Englert, Carsten
Blunk, Torsten
Müller, Rainer
von Glasser, Sabine Schulze
Baumer, Julia
Fierlbeck, Johann
Heid, Iris M
Nerlich, Michael
Hammer, Joachim
author_sort Englert, Carsten
collection PubMed
description After trauma, articular cartilage often does not heal due to incomplete bonding of the fractured surfaces. In this study we investigated the ability of chemical cross-linkers to facilitate bonding of articular cartilage, either alone or in combination with a pre-treatment with surface-degrading agents. Articular cartilage blocks were harvested from the femoropatellar groove of bovine calves. Two cartilage blocks, either after pre-treatment or without, were assembled in a custom-designed chamber in partial apposition and subjected to cross-linking treatment. Subsequently, bonding of cartilage was measured as adhesive strength, that is, the maximum force at rupture of bonded cartilage blocks divided by the overlap area. In a first approach, bonding was investigated after treatment with cross-linking reagents only, employing glutaraldehyde, 1-ethyl-3-diaminopropyl-carbodiimide (EDC)/N-hydroxysuccinimide (NHS), genipin, or transglutaminase. Experiments were conducted with or without compression of the opposing surfaces. Compression during cross-linking strongly enhanced bonding, especially when applying EDC/NHS and glutaraldehyde. Therefore, all further experiments were performed under compressive conditions. Combinations of each of the four cross-linking agents with the degrading pre-treatments, pepsin, trypsin, and guanidine, led to distinct improvements in bonding compared to the use of cross-linkers alone. The highest values of adhesive strength were achieved employing combinations of pepsin or guanidine with EDC/NHS, and guanidine with glutaraldehyde. The release of extracellular matrix components, that is, glycosaminoglycans and total collagen, from cartilage blocks after pre-treatment was measured, but could not be directly correlated to the determined adhesive strength. Cytotoxicity was determined for all substances employed, that is, surface degrading agents and cross-linkers, using the resazurin assay. Taking the favourable cell vitality after treatment with pepsin and EDC/NHS and the cytotoxic effects of guanidine and glutaraldehyde into account, the combination of pepsin and EDC/NHS appeared to be the most advantageous treatment in this study. In conclusion, bonding of articular cartilage blocks was achieved by chemical fixation of their surface components using cross-linking reagents. Application of compressive forces and prior modulation of surface structures enhanced cartilage bonding significantly. Enzymatic treatment in combination with cross-linkers may represent a promising addition to current techniques for articular cartilage repair.
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spelling pubmed-22063512008-01-19 Bonding of articular cartilage using a combination of biochemical degradation and surface cross-linking Englert, Carsten Blunk, Torsten Müller, Rainer von Glasser, Sabine Schulze Baumer, Julia Fierlbeck, Johann Heid, Iris M Nerlich, Michael Hammer, Joachim Arthritis Res Ther Research Article After trauma, articular cartilage often does not heal due to incomplete bonding of the fractured surfaces. In this study we investigated the ability of chemical cross-linkers to facilitate bonding of articular cartilage, either alone or in combination with a pre-treatment with surface-degrading agents. Articular cartilage blocks were harvested from the femoropatellar groove of bovine calves. Two cartilage blocks, either after pre-treatment or without, were assembled in a custom-designed chamber in partial apposition and subjected to cross-linking treatment. Subsequently, bonding of cartilage was measured as adhesive strength, that is, the maximum force at rupture of bonded cartilage blocks divided by the overlap area. In a first approach, bonding was investigated after treatment with cross-linking reagents only, employing glutaraldehyde, 1-ethyl-3-diaminopropyl-carbodiimide (EDC)/N-hydroxysuccinimide (NHS), genipin, or transglutaminase. Experiments were conducted with or without compression of the opposing surfaces. Compression during cross-linking strongly enhanced bonding, especially when applying EDC/NHS and glutaraldehyde. Therefore, all further experiments were performed under compressive conditions. Combinations of each of the four cross-linking agents with the degrading pre-treatments, pepsin, trypsin, and guanidine, led to distinct improvements in bonding compared to the use of cross-linkers alone. The highest values of adhesive strength were achieved employing combinations of pepsin or guanidine with EDC/NHS, and guanidine with glutaraldehyde. The release of extracellular matrix components, that is, glycosaminoglycans and total collagen, from cartilage blocks after pre-treatment was measured, but could not be directly correlated to the determined adhesive strength. Cytotoxicity was determined for all substances employed, that is, surface degrading agents and cross-linkers, using the resazurin assay. Taking the favourable cell vitality after treatment with pepsin and EDC/NHS and the cytotoxic effects of guanidine and glutaraldehyde into account, the combination of pepsin and EDC/NHS appeared to be the most advantageous treatment in this study. In conclusion, bonding of articular cartilage blocks was achieved by chemical fixation of their surface components using cross-linking reagents. Application of compressive forces and prior modulation of surface structures enhanced cartilage bonding significantly. Enzymatic treatment in combination with cross-linkers may represent a promising addition to current techniques for articular cartilage repair. BioMed Central 2007 2007-05-15 /pmc/articles/PMC2206351/ /pubmed/17504533 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/ar2202 Text en Copyright © 2007 Englert et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Englert, Carsten
Blunk, Torsten
Müller, Rainer
von Glasser, Sabine Schulze
Baumer, Julia
Fierlbeck, Johann
Heid, Iris M
Nerlich, Michael
Hammer, Joachim
Bonding of articular cartilage using a combination of biochemical degradation and surface cross-linking
title Bonding of articular cartilage using a combination of biochemical degradation and surface cross-linking
title_full Bonding of articular cartilage using a combination of biochemical degradation and surface cross-linking
title_fullStr Bonding of articular cartilage using a combination of biochemical degradation and surface cross-linking
title_full_unstemmed Bonding of articular cartilage using a combination of biochemical degradation and surface cross-linking
title_short Bonding of articular cartilage using a combination of biochemical degradation and surface cross-linking
title_sort bonding of articular cartilage using a combination of biochemical degradation and surface cross-linking
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2206351/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17504533
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/ar2202
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