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Hypoxia and mesenchymal stromal cells as key drivers of initial fracture healing in an equine in vitro fracture hematoma model

Fractures in horses–whether simple fractures with just one clean break, or incomplete greenstick with stress fractures, or complications such as shattered bones can all be either minimal or even catastrophic. Thus, improvement in fracture healing is a hallmark in equine orthopedics. The fracture hea...

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Autores principales: Pfeiffenberger, Moritz, Bartsch, Janika, Hoff, Paula, Ponomarev, Igor, Barnewitz, Dirk, Thöne-Reineke, Christa, Buttgereit, Frank, Gaber, Timo, Lang, Annemarie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6449067/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30947253
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0214276
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author Pfeiffenberger, Moritz
Bartsch, Janika
Hoff, Paula
Ponomarev, Igor
Barnewitz, Dirk
Thöne-Reineke, Christa
Buttgereit, Frank
Gaber, Timo
Lang, Annemarie
author_facet Pfeiffenberger, Moritz
Bartsch, Janika
Hoff, Paula
Ponomarev, Igor
Barnewitz, Dirk
Thöne-Reineke, Christa
Buttgereit, Frank
Gaber, Timo
Lang, Annemarie
author_sort Pfeiffenberger, Moritz
collection PubMed
description Fractures in horses–whether simple fractures with just one clean break, or incomplete greenstick with stress fractures, or complications such as shattered bones can all be either minimal or even catastrophic. Thus, improvement in fracture healing is a hallmark in equine orthopedics. The fracture healing process implements a complex sequence of events including the initial inflammatory phase removing damaged tissue, re-establishment of vessels and mesenchymal stromal cells, a soft and hard callus phase closing the fracture gap as well as the remodeling phase shaping the bone to a scar-free tissue. Detailed knowledge on processes in equine fracture healing in general and on the initial phase in particular is apparently very limited. Therefore, we generated equine in vitro fracture hematoma models (FH models) to study time-dependent changes in cell composition and RNA-expression for the most prominent cells in the FH model (immune cells, mesenchymal stromal cells) under conditions most closely adapted to the in vivo situation (hypoxia) by using flow cytometry and qPCR. In order to analyze the impact of mesenchymal stromal cells in greater detail, we also incubated blood clots without the addition of mesenchymal stromal cells under the same conditions as a control. We observed a superior survival capacity of mesenchymal stromal cells over immune cells within our FH model maintained under hypoxia. Furthermore, we demonstrate an upregulation of relevant angiogenic, osteogenic and hypoxia-induced markers within 48 h, a time well-known to be crucial for proper fracture healing.
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spelling pubmed-64490672019-04-19 Hypoxia and mesenchymal stromal cells as key drivers of initial fracture healing in an equine in vitro fracture hematoma model Pfeiffenberger, Moritz Bartsch, Janika Hoff, Paula Ponomarev, Igor Barnewitz, Dirk Thöne-Reineke, Christa Buttgereit, Frank Gaber, Timo Lang, Annemarie PLoS One Research Article Fractures in horses–whether simple fractures with just one clean break, or incomplete greenstick with stress fractures, or complications such as shattered bones can all be either minimal or even catastrophic. Thus, improvement in fracture healing is a hallmark in equine orthopedics. The fracture healing process implements a complex sequence of events including the initial inflammatory phase removing damaged tissue, re-establishment of vessels and mesenchymal stromal cells, a soft and hard callus phase closing the fracture gap as well as the remodeling phase shaping the bone to a scar-free tissue. Detailed knowledge on processes in equine fracture healing in general and on the initial phase in particular is apparently very limited. Therefore, we generated equine in vitro fracture hematoma models (FH models) to study time-dependent changes in cell composition and RNA-expression for the most prominent cells in the FH model (immune cells, mesenchymal stromal cells) under conditions most closely adapted to the in vivo situation (hypoxia) by using flow cytometry and qPCR. In order to analyze the impact of mesenchymal stromal cells in greater detail, we also incubated blood clots without the addition of mesenchymal stromal cells under the same conditions as a control. We observed a superior survival capacity of mesenchymal stromal cells over immune cells within our FH model maintained under hypoxia. Furthermore, we demonstrate an upregulation of relevant angiogenic, osteogenic and hypoxia-induced markers within 48 h, a time well-known to be crucial for proper fracture healing. Public Library of Science 2019-04-04 /pmc/articles/PMC6449067/ /pubmed/30947253 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0214276 Text en © 2019 Pfeiffenberger 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Pfeiffenberger, Moritz
Bartsch, Janika
Hoff, Paula
Ponomarev, Igor
Barnewitz, Dirk
Thöne-Reineke, Christa
Buttgereit, Frank
Gaber, Timo
Lang, Annemarie
Hypoxia and mesenchymal stromal cells as key drivers of initial fracture healing in an equine in vitro fracture hematoma model
title Hypoxia and mesenchymal stromal cells as key drivers of initial fracture healing in an equine in vitro fracture hematoma model
title_full Hypoxia and mesenchymal stromal cells as key drivers of initial fracture healing in an equine in vitro fracture hematoma model
title_fullStr Hypoxia and mesenchymal stromal cells as key drivers of initial fracture healing in an equine in vitro fracture hematoma model
title_full_unstemmed Hypoxia and mesenchymal stromal cells as key drivers of initial fracture healing in an equine in vitro fracture hematoma model
title_short Hypoxia and mesenchymal stromal cells as key drivers of initial fracture healing in an equine in vitro fracture hematoma model
title_sort hypoxia and mesenchymal stromal cells as key drivers of initial fracture healing in an equine in vitro fracture hematoma model
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6449067/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30947253
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0214276
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