A synthetic mechano-growth factor E peptide promotes rat tenocyte migration by lessening cell stiffness and increasing F-actin formation via the FAK-ERK1/2 signaling pathway.
Zhang. Bingyu B; Luo. Qing Q; Mao. Xinjian X; Xu. Baiyao B; Yang. Li L; Ju. Yang Y; Song. Guanbin G
Key Findings
- MGF‑C25E increases migration of rat tenocytes (tendon cells) in a scratch‑wound test.
- stiffness (Young
- The pro‑migration effect depends on activation of the FAK‑ERK1/2 signaling pathway; inhibitors of these pathways block the effect.
Practical Outcomes
- The results hint that MGF‑C25E might be useful for faster tendon repair, which could interest athletes or anyone dealing with tendon injuries. However, the study is limited to rats, provides no human dosing or safety data, and the peptide is not approved for self‑use, so it’s not yet a ready‑to‑apply protocol for biohackers.
Summary
A lab study in rats found that a synthetic piece of the growth factor called MGF‑C25E helps tendon cells move faster and become softer, which could speed up tendon healing. The effect works through specific cell‑signaling pathways (FAK and ERK1/2), and blocking those pathways stops the benefit.
Abstract
Tendon injuries are common in sports and are frequent reasons for orthopedic consultations. The management of damaged tendons is one of the most challenging problems in orthopedics. Mechano-growth factor (MGF), a recently discovered growth repair factor, plays positive roles in tissue repair through the improvement of cell proliferation and migration and the protection of cells against injury-induced apoptosis. However, it remains unclear whether MGF has the potential to accelerate tendon repair. We used a scratch wound assay in this study to demonstrate that MGF-C25E (a synthetic mechano-growth factor E peptide) promotes the migration of rat tenocytes and that this promotion is accompanied by an elevation in the expression of the following signaling molecules: focal adhesion kinase (FAK) and extracellular signal regulated kinase1/2 (ERK1/2). Inhibitors of the FAK and ERK1/2 pathways inhibited the MGF-C25E-induced tenocyte migration, indicating that MGF-C25E promotes tenocyte migration through the FAK-ERK1/2 signaling pathway. The analysis of the mechanical properties showed that the Young's modulus of tenocytes was decreased through treatment of MGF-C25E, and an obvious formation of pseudopodia and F-actin was observed in MGF-C25E-treated tenocytes. The inhibition of the FAK or ERK1/2 signals restored the decrease in Young's modulus and inhibited the formation of pseudopodia and F-actin. Overall, our study demonstrated that MGF-C25E promotes rat tenocyte migration by lessening cell stiffness and increasing pseudopodia formation via the FAK-ERK1/2 signaling pathway.
Study Information
pubmed
2014
2014-01-13T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.yexcr.2014.01.005
36
35