MGF E peptide improves anterior cruciate ligament repair by inhibiting hypoxia-induced cell apoptosis and accelerating angiogenesis.
Sha. Yongqiang Y; Yang. Li L; Lv. Yonggang Y
Key Findings
- MGF‑E peptide protects ACL fibroblasts from hypoxia‑induced apoptosis by modulating caspase and related proteins.
- The peptide activates mitochondrial, MEK‑ERK1/2, and PI3K‑Akt pathways to promote cell survival.
- In rabbits with torn ACLs, MGF‑E lowers HIF‑1α, reduces cell death, boosts cell proliferation, and enhances angiogenesis via the SDF‑1α/CXCR4‑VEGF axis.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers interested in joint health or injury recovery, MGF‑E shows promise as a targeted peptide that could improve ligament healing, but the data are limited to animal studies. Until human trials are available, any use would be experimental and should be approached with caution, considering dosage, delivery method, and regulatory status.
Summary
A short peptide called MGF‑E helps knee ligament cells survive low‑oxygen conditions, reduces cell death, and speeds up new blood‑vessel growth in a rabbit ACL injury model. The peptide works by tweaking several cell‑survival pathways and lowering stress‑related proteins.
Abstract
Severe hypoxic microenvironment endangers cell survival of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) fibroblasts and is harmful to ACL repair and regeneration. In the current study, we explored the effects of mechanogrowth factor (MGF) E peptide on the hypoxia-induced apoptosis of ACL fibroblasts and relevant mechanisms. It demonstrated that severe hypoxia promoted hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α) expression and caused cell apoptosis of ACL fibroblasts through increasing caspase 3/7/9 messenger RNA (mRNA), cleaved caspase 3 and proapoptotic proteins expression levels but decreasing antiapoptotic proteins expression levels. Fortunately, MGF E peptide effectively protected ACL fibroblasts against hypoxia-induced apoptosis through regulating caspase 3/7/9 mRNA, cleaved caspase 3 and apoptosis-relevant proteins expression levels. Simultaneously, mitochondrial, @@@MEK-ERK1/2 (extracellular-signal-regulated kinase 1/2), and phosphoinositide-3-kinase-protein kinase B (PI3K-Akt) pathways were involved in MGF E peptide regulating hypoxia-induced apoptosis of ACL fibroblasts. In rabbit ACL rupture model, MGF E peptide also decreased HIF-1α expression levels, cell apoptosis, and facilitated cell proliferation. In addition, MGF could accelerate angiogenesis after ACL injury probably owing to its recruitment of proangiogenesis cells by stromal cell-derived factor 1α/CXCR4 axis and stimulation of vascular endothelial growth factor α expression level. In conclusion, our findings suggested that MGF E peptide could be utilized for ACL repair and regeneration and supplied experimental support for its application in clinical ACL treatment as a potential strategy.
Study Information
pubmed
2018
2018-10-14T00:00:00.000Z
10.1002/jcp.27546
17
66