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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 20 - 20
1 Mar 2021
Hofstee MI Riool M Thompson K Stoddart MJ Zaat SAJ Moriarty TF
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Staphylococcus aureus is the main cause of osteomyelitis and forms biofilm and staphylococcal abscess communities (SACs) in humans. While S. aureus has several toxins with specificity for human targets and working with human host cells would be preferred, for SACs no in vitro models, two-dimensional (2D) or three-dimensional (3D), have been described in literature to date. Advanced 3D in vitro cell culture models enable the incorporation of human cells and resemble in vivo tissue more closely than conventional 2D cell culture. Therefore, the aim of this study was to develop an in vitro model of SACs by using a 3D system. The model should allow for studies into antibiotic tolerance and S. aureus - human host cells interactions. With a clinical isolate (S. aureus JAR) or a lab strain (S. aureus ATCC 49230-GFP), SACs were grown in a collagen gel (1.78 mg/ml, Gibco) supplemented with 200 µl human plasma at 37 °C. Transmission and scanning electron microscopy was used to obtain a detailed overview of SACs, whereas immunofluorescent stainings were done to determine whether the pseudocapsule around SACs consist of fibrin. Antibiotic tolerance of SACs was assessed with 100× the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) of gentamicin (Roth). Bacterial clearance of non-establised SACs and established SACs with or without pseudocapsule was determined by exposure to differentiated PLB neutrophil-like cells (differentiation with 1.25% DMSO and 5% FBS for 5 days; dPLB) or primary neutrophils isolated with lymphoprep from fresh heparin blood. Degradation of the pseudocapsule was done with 7.5 µl/ml plasmin (Sigma). Colony forming unit (CFU) counts were performed as quantification method. Statistical analysis was performed with the ANOVA multiple comparison test or, when data was not normally distributed, with a Mann-Whitney U test. We have developed a 3D in vitro model of SACs which after overnight growth were on average 200 micrometers in diameter, consisted of 8 log10 CFUs and were surrounded by an inner and outer fibrin pseudocapsule. The in vitro grown SACs tolerated 100× the MIC of gentamicin for 24h and did not significantly differ from control SACs (p=0.1000). dPLB neutrophil-like cells or primary neutrophils did not clear established in vitro SACs (p=0.1102 and p=0.8767, respectively). When the fibrin pseudocapsule was degraded by the enzyme plasmin, dPLB neutrophil-like cells or primary neutrophils caused for a significant decrease in total CFU compared the SACs that did had a pseudocapsule (p=0.0333 and p=0.0272, respectively). The in vitro SACs model offers a tool for host-pathogen interaction and drug efficacy assessments and is a valuable starting point for future research


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 43 - 43
1 Nov 2018
Aaron R
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OA pathophysiology has a vascular component consisting of venous stasis resulting in intraosseous hypertension and hypoxia. In response, osteoblasts change their cytokine expression, accelerating bone remodelling and cartilage breakdown consistent with OA. We have characterized circulatory kinetics in OA bone in animal models with dynamic contrast enhanced MRI (DCE-MRI) and . 18. F PET and have demonstrated venous stasis and reduced perfusion that temporally precede and spatially coincide with OA lesions. Osteoblast uptake of . 18. F is consistent with abnormal perfusion, bone remodelling, and severity of OA. Circulatory kinetics with DCE-MRI in humans with OA of the knee exhibit similar venous outflow obstruction. Venous stasis is associated with hypoxia in subchondral bone. As an example of the effects of hypoxia on OA osteoblasts, we have described upregulation of fibrinolytic peptides, but a deficiency in the upregulation of PAI-1, leading to the generation of plasmin by human OA osteoblasts exposed to hypoxia in vitro. Plasmin is a serine protease that has been shown to degrade cartilage in OA. Abnormal circulatory kinetics by DCE-MRI may be an imaging biomarker of OA. Pharmacologic modulation of venous stasis would have a salutary effect on the physicochemical microcirculation of subchondral osteoblasts and the pathophysiology of OA


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 3 | Pages 404 - 412
1 Mar 2018
Parker JD Lim KS Kieser DC Woodfield TBF Hooper GJ

Aims

The intra-articular administration of tranexamic acid (TXA) has been shown to be effective in reducing blood loss in unicompartmental knee arthroplasty and anterior cruciate reconstruction. The effects on human articular cartilage, however, remains unknown. Our aim, in this study, was to investigate any detrimental effect of TXA on chondrocytes, and to establish if there was a safe dose for its use in clinical practice. The hypothesis was that TXA would cause a dose-dependent damage to human articular cartilage.

Materials and Methods

The cellular morphology, adhesion, metabolic activity, and viability of human chondrocytes when increasing the concentration (0 mg/ml to 40 mg/ml) and length of exposure to TXA (0 to 12 hours) were analyzed in a 2D model. This was then repeated, excluding cellular adhesion, in a 3D model and confirmed in viable samples of articular cartilage.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 89-B, Issue 5 | Pages 693 - 700
1 May 2007
Ishii I Mizuta H Sei A Hirose J Kudo S Hiraki Y

We have investigated in vitro the release kinetics and bioactivity of fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2) released from a carrier of fibrin sealant. In order to evaluate the effects of the FGF-2 delivery mechanism on the repair of articular cartilage, full-thickness cylindrical defects, 5 mm in diameter and 4 mm in depth, which were too large to undergo spontaneous repair, were created in the femoral trochlea of rabbit knees. These defects were then filled with the sealant.

Approximately 50% of the FGF-2 was released from the sealant within 24 hours while its original bioactivity was maintained. The implantation of the fibrin sealant incorporating FGF-2 successfully induced healing of the surface with hyaline cartilage and concomitant repair of the subchondral bone at eight weeks after the creation of the defect.

Our findings suggest that this delivery method for FGF-2 may be useful for promoting regenerative repair of full-thickness defects of articular cartilage in humans.