Transient Early Mechanical Loading Induces Hypertrophic Chondrocyte Differentiation of Human Mesenchymal Stromal Cells
Sina Enzmann, Aline N. Klaus, Romano Matthys, Esther Wehrle, Martin J. Stoddart, Sophie Verrier

TL;DR
Short mechanical stimulation early on can effectively trigger bone-healing cell changes in human stem cells.
Contribution
Early short mechanical stimulation is as effective as prolonged stimulation in inducing hypertrophic chondrocyte differentiation in MSCs.
Findings
10% strain induces robust hypertrophic differentiation in MSCs across all stimulation protocols.
Short early stimulation (P2ce) is as effective as long-term stimulation in triggering cell differentiation.
Early mechanical signals have a lasting effect on cell behavior even after stimulation stops.
Abstract
What are the main findings? Mechanical stimulation induces hypertrophic differentiation of naïve MSCs.Short early stimulation is as efficient as prolonged stimulation. Mechanical stimulation induces hypertrophic differentiation of naïve MSCs. Short early stimulation is as efficient as prolonged stimulation. What is the implication of the main finding? Our findings could guide future in vivo studies exploring the effect of mechanical stimulation on healing outcomes.Our data could provide in vitro support for the development of smart implants. Our findings could guide future in vivo studies exploring the effect of mechanical stimulation on healing outcomes. Our data could provide in vitro support for the development of smart implants. Optimal mechanical parameters for successful bone-healing remain unclear despite their critical influence on fracture outcomes, and the timing of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOsteoarthritis Treatment and Mechanisms · Bone fractures and treatments · Heterotopic Ossification and Related Conditions
