Cellular homeostatic tension and force transmission measured in human engineered tendon

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Cellular homeostatic tension and force transmission measured in human engineered tendon. / Giannopoulos, Antonis; Svensson, Rene B.; Heinemeier, Katja M; Schjerling, Peter; Kadler, Karl E; Holmes, David F; Kjær, Michael; Magnusson, S. Peter.

In: Journal of Biomechanics, Vol. 78, 2018, p. 161-165.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Giannopoulos, A, Svensson, RB, Heinemeier, KM, Schjerling, P, Kadler, KE, Holmes, DF, Kjær, M & Magnusson, SP 2018, 'Cellular homeostatic tension and force transmission measured in human engineered tendon', Journal of Biomechanics, vol. 78, pp. 161-165. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbiomech.2018.07.032

APA

Giannopoulos, A., Svensson, R. B., Heinemeier, K. M., Schjerling, P., Kadler, K. E., Holmes, D. F., Kjær, M., & Magnusson, S. P. (2018). Cellular homeostatic tension and force transmission measured in human engineered tendon. Journal of Biomechanics, 78, 161-165. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbiomech.2018.07.032

Vancouver

Giannopoulos A, Svensson RB, Heinemeier KM, Schjerling P, Kadler KE, Holmes DF et al. Cellular homeostatic tension and force transmission measured in human engineered tendon. Journal of Biomechanics. 2018;78:161-165. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbiomech.2018.07.032

Author

Giannopoulos, Antonis ; Svensson, Rene B. ; Heinemeier, Katja M ; Schjerling, Peter ; Kadler, Karl E ; Holmes, David F ; Kjær, Michael ; Magnusson, S. Peter. / Cellular homeostatic tension and force transmission measured in human engineered tendon. In: Journal of Biomechanics. 2018 ; Vol. 78. pp. 161-165.

Bibtex

@article{d98af4cc455c48c89ced34f91dcb55b9,
title = "Cellular homeostatic tension and force transmission measured in human engineered tendon",
abstract = "Tendons transmit contractile muscular force to bone to produce movement, and it is believed cells can generate endogenous forces on the extracellular matrix to maintain tissue homeostasis. However, little is known about the direct mechanical measurement of cell-matrix interaction in cell-generated human tendon constructs. In this study we examined if cell-generated force could be detected and quantified in engineered human tendon constructs, and if glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) contribute to tendon force transmission. Following de-tensioning of the tendon constructs it was possible to quantify an endogenous re-tensioning. Further, it was demonstrated that the endogenous re-tensioning response was markedly blunted after interference with the cytoskeleton (inhibiting non-muscle myosin-dependent cell contraction by blebbistatin), which confirmed that re-tensioning was cell generated. When the constructs were elongated and held at a constant length a stress relaxation response was quantified, and removing 27% of the GAG content of tendon did not alter the relaxation behavior, which indicates that GAGs do not play a meaningful role in force transmission within this system.",
author = "Antonis Giannopoulos and Svensson, {Rene B.} and Heinemeier, {Katja M} and Peter Schjerling and Kadler, {Karl E} and Holmes, {David F} and Michael Kj{\ae}r and Magnusson, {S. Peter}",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1016/j.jbiomech.2018.07.032",
language = "English",
volume = "78",
pages = "161--165",
journal = "Journal of Biomechanics",
issn = "0021-9290",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Cellular homeostatic tension and force transmission measured in human engineered tendon

AU - Giannopoulos, Antonis

AU - Svensson, Rene B.

AU - Heinemeier, Katja M

AU - Schjerling, Peter

AU - Kadler, Karl E

AU - Holmes, David F

AU - Kjær, Michael

AU - Magnusson, S. Peter

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Tendons transmit contractile muscular force to bone to produce movement, and it is believed cells can generate endogenous forces on the extracellular matrix to maintain tissue homeostasis. However, little is known about the direct mechanical measurement of cell-matrix interaction in cell-generated human tendon constructs. In this study we examined if cell-generated force could be detected and quantified in engineered human tendon constructs, and if glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) contribute to tendon force transmission. Following de-tensioning of the tendon constructs it was possible to quantify an endogenous re-tensioning. Further, it was demonstrated that the endogenous re-tensioning response was markedly blunted after interference with the cytoskeleton (inhibiting non-muscle myosin-dependent cell contraction by blebbistatin), which confirmed that re-tensioning was cell generated. When the constructs were elongated and held at a constant length a stress relaxation response was quantified, and removing 27% of the GAG content of tendon did not alter the relaxation behavior, which indicates that GAGs do not play a meaningful role in force transmission within this system.

AB - Tendons transmit contractile muscular force to bone to produce movement, and it is believed cells can generate endogenous forces on the extracellular matrix to maintain tissue homeostasis. However, little is known about the direct mechanical measurement of cell-matrix interaction in cell-generated human tendon constructs. In this study we examined if cell-generated force could be detected and quantified in engineered human tendon constructs, and if glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) contribute to tendon force transmission. Following de-tensioning of the tendon constructs it was possible to quantify an endogenous re-tensioning. Further, it was demonstrated that the endogenous re-tensioning response was markedly blunted after interference with the cytoskeleton (inhibiting non-muscle myosin-dependent cell contraction by blebbistatin), which confirmed that re-tensioning was cell generated. When the constructs were elongated and held at a constant length a stress relaxation response was quantified, and removing 27% of the GAG content of tendon did not alter the relaxation behavior, which indicates that GAGs do not play a meaningful role in force transmission within this system.

U2 - 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2018.07.032

DO - 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2018.07.032

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 30100218

VL - 78

SP - 161

EP - 165

JO - Journal of Biomechanics

JF - Journal of Biomechanics

SN - 0021-9290

ER -

ID: 215925488