Role of the inter-fascicular matrix in age related deterioration of tendon mechanical function

Lead Research Organisation: University College London
Department Name: Institute of Orthopaedics

Abstract

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Technical Summary

We have preliminary evidence that the interfascicular matrix (IFM) is a key determinant of tendon failure properties and fatigue resistance. We hypothesise that injury prone energy storing tendons have an extensible IFM with minimal hysteresis, leading to a structure with improved fatigue resistance. Poor optimisation of the IFM or structural changes with age may predispose individuals to tendinopathy.

This project aims to investigate the role of the IFM in modulating fatigue resistance. Using an equine model, we will compare IFM composition and mechanics between a high strain energy storing and a low strain positional tendon, correlating these data with the mechanical characteristics of the tendons. Looking specifically at the energy storing tendon, we will then establish how the IFM changes with ageing and how this influences fatigue resistance. Finally, we will use knockout models and enzymatic techniques to manipulate IFM composition, and establish how this influences our findings.

The equine model proves an ideal energy storing tendon, with similar properties to the human Achilles. It is also large enough to be used for a series of experiments, enabling paired statistical analyses of the influence of IFM organisation and age on tendon function. IFM composition will be assessed using histology, immunohistochemistry, mass spectroscopy and qPCR. IFM, fascicle and tendon mechanical properties will be determined using quasi-static and cyclic fatigue tests to failure.

Data will provide greater understanding of how injury and ageing influence tendon mechanics via the IFM and may provide insights into methods of limiting injury risk. This will inform treatment practices, and facilitate the design of targeted drugs or treatments for the IFM. It may also be possible to develop training protocols to encourage appropriate IFM development, with the long term goals of decreasing the incidence of tendon injury and improving recovery rate post-injury.

Planned Impact

Tendon disorders are highly debilitating and painful, and musculoskeletal injuries lead to more days off work than any other illness, costing the economy over £7 billion a year (1). Tendon injury is also common in horses (2) and with a total economic impact of over £3 billion a year from horse racing (3), preventing tendon injuries is high priority (4). A key outcome from our grant is improved understanding of tendon fatigue resistance which is fundamental to preventing damage. We anticipate considerable long term societal benefits to patients with tendon injuries, both preventing new cases and improving healing. This will improve quality of life, reduce strain on the NHS, and lower costs associated with time off work. Such findings are also directly relevant to horses. Around 16,000 race horses are in training each year (3), and tendon injury rate is as high as 43% with very few horses returning to racing post injury; preventing these injuries is essential for the economic health of the industry and to improve equine welfare (5). To realise these potential impact opportunities, we will target our research towards clinical colleagues and medical or healthcare companies.

This project will benefit academics and clinicians with an interest in tendon (dys)function. In the short term, our understanding of how tendons respond to load may clarify optimal methods for treating tendon injury. There is no current consensus on tendon treatment, and no clear physiotherapy regime to promote healing. The PI works closely with a clinical physiotherapist specialising in tendon disorders, and the pair have developed techniques for investigating in vivo tendon biomechanics. We anticipate using these systems to translate our in vitro findings to an in vivo setting and determine optimal physiotherapy training mechanisms for tendon repair. We also have a veterinary surgeon and academic within the current investigative team, enabling us to translate our research across veterinary boundaries. Discussions with these healthcare partners will not only provide valuable feedback on the clinical relevance of our data, but also allow us to consider the optimal methods of disseminating our findings in a manner accessible to healthcare professionals.

Towards the end of the grant we will focus on R&D investment. In characterising the key matrix components that protect tendon from damage, this work will be of interest to companies keen to develop products to prevent or treat tendon injury. There is also strong potential for collaboration with biomaterials and tissue engineering companies. The composite structure of tendon appears key to its optimal function and fatigue resistance. Characterising this will enable us to identify the specific material requirements that must be recapitulated in artificial tendons, significantly improving our potential for developing functional repairs. With skills in biomaterials amongst the applicants, we would remain closely involved in the development of repair solutions. The team has experience of working with medical device companies focused on tissue implant products (e.g. Tissue Science Laboratories; now Coviden), enabling us to advance research towards biomaterial tendon repairs. We also predict tissue engineering benefits, specifically relating to the biological and mechanical environment surrounding cells in the non-collagenous tendon matrix. We anticipate that our data will highlight how cell environment differs in healthy and damaged tendon, providing insights into the optimal in vitro environment for promoting tendon repair. As an additional area of expertise within the research team, we would aim to develop links with tissue engineering companies to take this forward.
1 Bevan 2007 Pub The Work Foundation
2 Clegg 2012 Equine Vet J 44:371
3 Deloitte LLP 2009 Pub British Horseracing Authority
4 HBLB 2012 Scope of veterinary research interests & current specific priorities
5 Dowling 2000 Equine Vet J 32:369

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Through the research funded on this grant, we have discovered several key findings, which have opened up new research areas, outlined below. Using a combination of mechanical testing and protein analysis techniques, we have answered important questions regarding structure function relationships within tendon. We have demonstrated that high fatigue resistance of the tendon interfascicular matrix (IFM) is important for tendon function, particularly in tendons that act as energy stores. This capacity for fatigue resistance is likely provided by two proteins, lubricin and elastin, which we have shown are highly localised to the IFM. We have further demonstrated that proteins within the IFM are renewed more rapidly than those in the fascicles, and additionally have shown that cyclic over loading of tendon explants causes damage predominantly within the IFM. Taken together, these data indicate that damage in response to overload may localise to the tendon IFM, potentially giving the IFM a protective role, in which it prevents damage propagation throughout the tendon by limiting it to an area that can more easily repair. We have also answered important questions regarding the effect of ageing on tendon structure function relationships, demonstrating that, while the fatigue resistance of both fascicles and the IFM decreases with ageing, the IFM suffers greater age-related changes overall. The age-related reductions in IFM elasticity and fatigue resistance are accompanied by a reduction in the rate of protein renewal, and decreased elastin content and organisation. This is likely to result in a reduced ability to repair damage to this region and therefore contributes to the increased risk of injury with ageing. These findings open up new avenues to explore how age-related alterations in IFM may affect tendon response to loading and subsequent injury susceptibility, and grant applications to answer these questions are already underway. In addition, the wealth of mechanical data characterising the response of tendon subunits to loading has generated several new collaborations with computational modellers across Europe, as these data are crucial to allow more accurate models of tendon behaviour to be developed. Our findings also raise important questions regarding in vivo tendon mechanics, and we have obtained further funding to develop ultrasound techniques that will allow us to fully characterise tendon mechanics in vivo. We have also assessed the contribution of specific proteins to IFM and fascicle mechanical properties. Samples in which proteoglycans have been disrupted by enzymatic digestion did not display any alterations in mechanical properties, suggesting that these proteins do not contribute significantly to the mechanics of either the IFM or fascicles. We have obtained internal funding for a PhD student who will perform similar studies to directly establish the role of elastin in IFM and fascicle mechanics.
Exploitation Route A greater understanding of how tendon responds to loading, how damage occurs, and how this is altered with ageing, will be of interest to medical and veterinary clinicians as these findings will help guide the development of treatments and preventative measures for tendon injury. Our findings will also be of benefit to researchers with an interest in soft tissue structure-function relationships. Indeed, as a result of this work, we are now collaborating with researchers from across Europe, for whom we are providing the data generated from our experiments to allow them to develop and validate their computational models of tendon mechanics. Further, our findings are also of importance to tissue engineering and biomaterials focused academics, as improved understanding of tissue function is key to developing appropriate artificial repairs.
Sectors Education,Healthcare,Leisure Activities, including Sports, Recreation and Tourism,Pharmaceuticals and Medical Biotechnology

URL http://www.tendon.qmul.ac.uk/index.html
 
Description To date, we have published five papers from the project, with a further two papers in preparation. It has been pleasing to see press releases for a number of these papers taken up and reported across a range of literature such as 'Science Daily' and 'Horse and Hound' and the PDRA has recently been asked to give a lay talk to the Worshipful Company of Farriers on the data from this project. We have also kept our tendon website up to date, to further promote our findings to both a scientific and lay audience. Having presented the data at a number of conferences, it has been exciting to see a growing interest in the IFM throughout our community, and a number of tendon researchers seem to be building on our data and beginning to investigate the role of the IFM in tendon injury and tendinopathy. This provides the opportunity for real impact over the coming years, as we look for new treatments for tendon disease. The tendon research meeting we held in September 2015 provided an outstanding opportunity to bring together researchers from our field and promote our work on the IFM. The feedback from that event has been excellent, and we have made a number of industrial links as a result of the event. We have just received funding for two new translational projects springing directly from our findings and the dissemination of research data. The PDRA has been awarded a highly prestigious fellowship with Arthritis Research UK, which she will begin later this year, whilst the PI has been awarded a project grant by the Horse Race Betting Levy Board which focuses on clinical applications for our findings and engages industry in developing new tools for analysing and managing tendon injury. The PI also has a further EPSRC grant under review, and the team has made two major new collaborative links with other research groups, to help take our findings forward. Concerning educational impact, we have continued to engage undergraduate and postgraduate students with our work, most recently including two undergraduate students on our latest publication from the project, as a result of their summer project work. The PDRA has also continued work as a STEM ambassador participating in further outreach events. In a broader capacity, we also enjoyed helping to film an episode of the children's educational programme "Operation Ouch", helping them to test tendons and show how strong they are and why.
First Year Of Impact 2014
Sector Education,Leisure Activities, including Sports, Recreation and Tourism
Impact Types Societal

 
Description HBLB Project Grant
Amount £158,155 (GBP)
Funding ID T5 
Organisation Horserace Betting Levy Board 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 05/2015 
End 05/2017
 
Description MRC DFPS
Amount £1,530,000 (GBP)
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 11/2014 
End 09/2017
 
Description Orthopaedic Research UK PhD Studentship
Amount £75,000 (GBP)
Organisation Orthopaedic Research UK 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 10/2016 
End 09/2019
 
Title Proteomic data set 
Description The new proteomic data set related to the tendon proteome has been added to the ProteomeXchange data repository 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2015 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact This data is now available to help any other researchers working on the tendon proteome - it also defines new protein peptides in the horse which may benefit researchers working on other tissues. 
 
Description Equine Nutrition and Training Conference invited keynote speaker 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Discussion about the impact of exercise on tendons and the nutritional aspects of tendon health

New links with veterinary health professionals
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2013
URL http://www.agpferd.com/equine-nutrition-and-training-conference-enutraco-2013/
 
Description Erasmus 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an open day or visit at my research institution
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact Erasmus exchange
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2016
 
Description MRC science week 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an open day or visit at my research institution
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Schools
Results and Impact We hosted a event at the World Museum in Liverpool in June 2016 and during MRC science week had an open day for schools at our institute. Whilst it was an MRC event we highlighted our BBSRC grant.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2016
 
Description Royal National Orthopedic Hospital Research Day invited speaker 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Health professionals
Results and Impact Discussion about the relationship with and impact of findings on other human diseases

Increased awareness of research expertise and potential for translational projects
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2014
 
Description Stanmore Campus Open Day 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Approximately 200 people attended an open day organised by the University and partner hospital to inform members of the public about the research, teaching and clinical work carried out on the Campus.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2016
 
Description Suffolk Osteopaths conference invited keynote speaker 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Research work was presented to a group of Osteopaths. The talk generated much interest and resulted in an invitation to return to provide an update of findings.

None yet
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2014,2016
 
Description Talk to Imperial College London Musculoskeletal Lab 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact Research presented to group of academics, post-graduate and under-graduate students interested in musculoskeletal tissues and disease followed by group discussion surrounding the research topic.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017