Osteoblast response to fluid induced shear depends on substrate microarchitecture and varies with time.

Standard

Osteoblast response to fluid induced shear depends on substrate microarchitecture and varies with time. / Schwartz, Z; Denison, T A; Bannister, S R; Cochran, D L; Liu, Y H; Lohmann, Christoph; Wieland, M; Boyan, B D.

In: J BIOMED MATER RES A, Vol. 83, No. 1, 1, 2007, p. 20-32.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Schwartz, Z, Denison, TA, Bannister, SR, Cochran, DL, Liu, YH, Lohmann, C, Wieland, M & Boyan, BD 2007, 'Osteoblast response to fluid induced shear depends on substrate microarchitecture and varies with time.', J BIOMED MATER RES A, vol. 83, no. 1, 1, pp. 20-32. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17340600?dopt=Citation>

APA

Schwartz, Z., Denison, T. A., Bannister, S. R., Cochran, D. L., Liu, Y. H., Lohmann, C., Wieland, M., & Boyan, B. D. (2007). Osteoblast response to fluid induced shear depends on substrate microarchitecture and varies with time. J BIOMED MATER RES A, 83(1), 20-32. [1]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17340600?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Schwartz Z, Denison TA, Bannister SR, Cochran DL, Liu YH, Lohmann C et al. Osteoblast response to fluid induced shear depends on substrate microarchitecture and varies with time. J BIOMED MATER RES A. 2007;83(1):20-32. 1.

Bibtex

@article{30388782cf914f97a086764efc4525af,
title = "Osteoblast response to fluid induced shear depends on substrate microarchitecture and varies with time.",
abstract = "Osteoblasts are exposed to fluid shear in vivo but the effects are not well understood, particularly how substrate properties or length of exposure modify the response. Short exposure (1 h) to shear reduces the stimulatory effect of micron-scale surface structure on osteoblast differentiation, but the effects of longer term exposures are not known. To test the hypothesis that substrate-dependent responses of osteoblasts to shear depend on the length of exposure to fluid flow, MG63 osteoblasts were grown on tissue culture glass, which has an average roughness (Ra) <0.2 microm; machined Ti disks (PT, Ra <0.6 microm); Ti disks with a complex microarchitecture [sand blasted acid etched (SLA), Ra = 4-5 microm); and Ti plasma-sprayed surfaces [Ti via plasma spray (TPS), Ra = 7 microm]. Confluent cultures were exposed to pulsatile flow at shear forces of 0, 1, and 14 dynes/cm(2) for 0, 6, 12, and 24 h. Shear reduced cell number on all surfaces, with greatest effects on TPS. Shear had no effect on alkaline phosphatase on smooth surfaces but increased enzyme activity on SLA and TPS in a time-dependent manner. Its effects on osteocalcin, TGF-beta1, and PGE(2) in the conditioned media were greatest on these surfaces as well. Responses to fluid-induced shear were blocked by the general Cox inhibitor indomethacin and the Cox-2 inhibitor meloxicam, indicating that response to shear is mediated by prostaglandin produced via a Cox-2 dependent mechanism. These results show that the effects of fluid induced shear change with time and are substrate dependent, suggesting that substrate microarchitecture regulates the osteoblast phenotype and effects of shear are determined by the maturation state of the responding population.",
author = "Z Schwartz and Denison, {T A} and Bannister, {S R} and Cochran, {D L} and Liu, {Y H} and Christoph Lohmann and M Wieland and Boyan, {B D}",
year = "2007",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "83",
pages = "20--32",
journal = "J BIOMED MATER RES A",
issn = "1549-3296",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Inc.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Osteoblast response to fluid induced shear depends on substrate microarchitecture and varies with time.

AU - Schwartz, Z

AU - Denison, T A

AU - Bannister, S R

AU - Cochran, D L

AU - Liu, Y H

AU - Lohmann, Christoph

AU - Wieland, M

AU - Boyan, B D

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - Osteoblasts are exposed to fluid shear in vivo but the effects are not well understood, particularly how substrate properties or length of exposure modify the response. Short exposure (1 h) to shear reduces the stimulatory effect of micron-scale surface structure on osteoblast differentiation, but the effects of longer term exposures are not known. To test the hypothesis that substrate-dependent responses of osteoblasts to shear depend on the length of exposure to fluid flow, MG63 osteoblasts were grown on tissue culture glass, which has an average roughness (Ra) <0.2 microm; machined Ti disks (PT, Ra <0.6 microm); Ti disks with a complex microarchitecture [sand blasted acid etched (SLA), Ra = 4-5 microm); and Ti plasma-sprayed surfaces [Ti via plasma spray (TPS), Ra = 7 microm]. Confluent cultures were exposed to pulsatile flow at shear forces of 0, 1, and 14 dynes/cm(2) for 0, 6, 12, and 24 h. Shear reduced cell number on all surfaces, with greatest effects on TPS. Shear had no effect on alkaline phosphatase on smooth surfaces but increased enzyme activity on SLA and TPS in a time-dependent manner. Its effects on osteocalcin, TGF-beta1, and PGE(2) in the conditioned media were greatest on these surfaces as well. Responses to fluid-induced shear were blocked by the general Cox inhibitor indomethacin and the Cox-2 inhibitor meloxicam, indicating that response to shear is mediated by prostaglandin produced via a Cox-2 dependent mechanism. These results show that the effects of fluid induced shear change with time and are substrate dependent, suggesting that substrate microarchitecture regulates the osteoblast phenotype and effects of shear are determined by the maturation state of the responding population.

AB - Osteoblasts are exposed to fluid shear in vivo but the effects are not well understood, particularly how substrate properties or length of exposure modify the response. Short exposure (1 h) to shear reduces the stimulatory effect of micron-scale surface structure on osteoblast differentiation, but the effects of longer term exposures are not known. To test the hypothesis that substrate-dependent responses of osteoblasts to shear depend on the length of exposure to fluid flow, MG63 osteoblasts were grown on tissue culture glass, which has an average roughness (Ra) <0.2 microm; machined Ti disks (PT, Ra <0.6 microm); Ti disks with a complex microarchitecture [sand blasted acid etched (SLA), Ra = 4-5 microm); and Ti plasma-sprayed surfaces [Ti via plasma spray (TPS), Ra = 7 microm]. Confluent cultures were exposed to pulsatile flow at shear forces of 0, 1, and 14 dynes/cm(2) for 0, 6, 12, and 24 h. Shear reduced cell number on all surfaces, with greatest effects on TPS. Shear had no effect on alkaline phosphatase on smooth surfaces but increased enzyme activity on SLA and TPS in a time-dependent manner. Its effects on osteocalcin, TGF-beta1, and PGE(2) in the conditioned media were greatest on these surfaces as well. Responses to fluid-induced shear were blocked by the general Cox inhibitor indomethacin and the Cox-2 inhibitor meloxicam, indicating that response to shear is mediated by prostaglandin produced via a Cox-2 dependent mechanism. These results show that the effects of fluid induced shear change with time and are substrate dependent, suggesting that substrate microarchitecture regulates the osteoblast phenotype and effects of shear are determined by the maturation state of the responding population.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 83

SP - 20

EP - 32

JO - J BIOMED MATER RES A

JF - J BIOMED MATER RES A

SN - 1549-3296

IS - 1

M1 - 1

ER -