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Of Mice, Men and Elephants: The Relation between Articular Cartilage Thickness and Body Mass

Mammalian articular cartilage serves diverse functions, including shock absorption, force transmission and enabling low-friction joint motion. These challenging requirements are met by the tissue’s thickness combined with its highly specific extracellular matrix, consisting of a glycosaminoglycan-in...

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Autores principales: Malda, Jos, de Grauw, Janny C., Benders, Kim E. M., Kik, Marja J. L., van de Lest, Chris H. A., Creemers, Laura B., Dhert, Wouter J. A., van Weeren, P. René
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3578797/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23437402
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0057683
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author Malda, Jos
de Grauw, Janny C.
Benders, Kim E. M.
Kik, Marja J. L.
van de Lest, Chris H. A.
Creemers, Laura B.
Dhert, Wouter J. A.
van Weeren, P. René
author_facet Malda, Jos
de Grauw, Janny C.
Benders, Kim E. M.
Kik, Marja J. L.
van de Lest, Chris H. A.
Creemers, Laura B.
Dhert, Wouter J. A.
van Weeren, P. René
author_sort Malda, Jos
collection PubMed
description Mammalian articular cartilage serves diverse functions, including shock absorption, force transmission and enabling low-friction joint motion. These challenging requirements are met by the tissue’s thickness combined with its highly specific extracellular matrix, consisting of a glycosaminoglycan-interspersed collagen fiber network that provides a unique combination of resilience and high compressive and shear resistance. It is unknown how this critical tissue deals with the challenges posed by increases in body mass. For this study, osteochondral cores were harvested post-mortem from the central sites of both medial and lateral femoral condyles of 58 different mammalian species ranging from 25 g (mouse) to 4000 kg (African elephant). Joint size and cartilage thickness were measured and biochemical composition (glycosaminoclycan, collagen and DNA content) and collagen cross-links densities were analyzed. Here, we show that cartilage thickness at the femoral condyle in the mammalian species investigated varies between 90 µm and 3000 µm and bears a negative allometric relationship to body mass, unlike the isometric scaling of the skeleton. Cellular density (as determined by DNA content) decreases with increasing body mass, but gross biochemical composition is remarkably constant. This however need not affect life-long performance of the tissue in heavier mammals, due to relatively constant static compressive stresses, the zonal organization of the tissue and additional compensation by joint congruence, posture and activity pattern of larger mammals. These findings provide insight in the scaling of articular cartilage thickness with body weight, as well as in cartilage biochemical composition and cellularity across mammalian species. They underscore the need for the use of appropriate in vivo models in translational research aiming at human applications.
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spelling pubmed-35787972013-02-22 Of Mice, Men and Elephants: The Relation between Articular Cartilage Thickness and Body Mass Malda, Jos de Grauw, Janny C. Benders, Kim E. M. Kik, Marja J. L. van de Lest, Chris H. A. Creemers, Laura B. Dhert, Wouter J. A. van Weeren, P. René PLoS One Research Article Mammalian articular cartilage serves diverse functions, including shock absorption, force transmission and enabling low-friction joint motion. These challenging requirements are met by the tissue’s thickness combined with its highly specific extracellular matrix, consisting of a glycosaminoglycan-interspersed collagen fiber network that provides a unique combination of resilience and high compressive and shear resistance. It is unknown how this critical tissue deals with the challenges posed by increases in body mass. For this study, osteochondral cores were harvested post-mortem from the central sites of both medial and lateral femoral condyles of 58 different mammalian species ranging from 25 g (mouse) to 4000 kg (African elephant). Joint size and cartilage thickness were measured and biochemical composition (glycosaminoclycan, collagen and DNA content) and collagen cross-links densities were analyzed. Here, we show that cartilage thickness at the femoral condyle in the mammalian species investigated varies between 90 µm and 3000 µm and bears a negative allometric relationship to body mass, unlike the isometric scaling of the skeleton. Cellular density (as determined by DNA content) decreases with increasing body mass, but gross biochemical composition is remarkably constant. This however need not affect life-long performance of the tissue in heavier mammals, due to relatively constant static compressive stresses, the zonal organization of the tissue and additional compensation by joint congruence, posture and activity pattern of larger mammals. These findings provide insight in the scaling of articular cartilage thickness with body weight, as well as in cartilage biochemical composition and cellularity across mammalian species. They underscore the need for the use of appropriate in vivo models in translational research aiming at human applications. Public Library of Science 2013-02-21 /pmc/articles/PMC3578797/ /pubmed/23437402 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0057683 Text en © 2013 Malda et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Malda, Jos
de Grauw, Janny C.
Benders, Kim E. M.
Kik, Marja J. L.
van de Lest, Chris H. A.
Creemers, Laura B.
Dhert, Wouter J. A.
van Weeren, P. René
Of Mice, Men and Elephants: The Relation between Articular Cartilage Thickness and Body Mass
title Of Mice, Men and Elephants: The Relation between Articular Cartilage Thickness and Body Mass
title_full Of Mice, Men and Elephants: The Relation between Articular Cartilage Thickness and Body Mass
title_fullStr Of Mice, Men and Elephants: The Relation between Articular Cartilage Thickness and Body Mass
title_full_unstemmed Of Mice, Men and Elephants: The Relation between Articular Cartilage Thickness and Body Mass
title_short Of Mice, Men and Elephants: The Relation between Articular Cartilage Thickness and Body Mass
title_sort of mice, men and elephants: the relation between articular cartilage thickness and body mass
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3578797/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23437402
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0057683
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