2 research outputs found
An investigation of BMP-7 mediated alterations to BMP signalling components in human tenocyte-like cells
The incidence of tendon re-tears post-surgery is an ever present complication.
It is suggested that the application of biological factors, such as bone
morphogenetic protein 7 (BMP-7), can reduce complication rates by promoting
tenogenic characteristics in in vitro studies. However, there remains a dearth
of information in regards to the mechanisms of BMP-7 signalling in tenocytes.
Using primary human tenocyte-like cells (hTLCs) from the supraspinatus tendon
the BMP-7 signalling pathway was investigated: induction of the BMP associated
Smad pathway and non-Smad pathways (AKT, p38, ERK1/2 and JNK); alterations in
gene expression of BMP-7 associated receptors, Smad pathway components, Smad
target gene (ID1) and tenogenic marker scleraxis. BMP-7 increases the
expression of specific BMP associated receptors, BMPR-Ib and BMPR-II, and
Smad8. Additionally, BMP-7 activates significantly Smad1/5/8 and slightly p38
pathways as indicated by an increase in phosphorylation and proven by
inhibition experiments, where p-ERK1/2 and p-JNK pathways remain mainly
unresponsive. Furthermore, BMP-7 increases the expression of the Smad target
gene ID1, and the tendon specific transcription factor scleraxis. The study
shows that tenocyte-like cells undergo primarily Smad8 and p38 signalling
after BMP-7 stimulation. The up-regulation of tendon related marker genes and
matrix proteins such as Smad8/9, scleraxis and collagen I might lead to
positive effects of BMP-7 treatment for rotator cuff repair, without
significant induction of osteogenic and chondrogenic markers