Hindlimb heating increases vascular access of large molecules to murine tibial growth plates measured by in vivo multiphoton imaging.

J Appl Physiol (1985)

Department of Anatomy and Pathology, Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine, Marshall University, Huntington, West Virginia.

Published: February 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • Advances in understanding the molecular regulation of growth have led to new drug therapies for growth plate disorders, but delivering these therapeutics to cartilage remains a challenge due to its lack of blood vessels.
  • Researchers used a hindlimb heating model on young mice to explore how increased temperatures could improve the delivery of large molecules into growth plates.
  • The study found that raising the temperature significantly enhanced the entry of smaller dextran molecules into the growth plates, suggesting that temperature management could be an effective non-invasive method for improving drug delivery in pediatric growth plate conditions.

Article Abstract

Advances in understanding the molecular regulation of longitudinal growth have led to development of novel drug therapies for growth plate disorders. Despite progress, a major unmet challenge is delivering therapeutic agents to avascular-cartilage plates. Dense extracellular matrix and lack of penetrating blood vessels create a semipermeable "barrier," which hinders molecular transport at the vascular-cartilage interface. To overcome this obstacle, we used a hindlimb heating model to manipulate bone circulation in 5-wk-old female mice (n = 22). Temperatures represented a physiological range of normal human knee joints. We used in vivo multiphoton microscopy to quantify temperature-enhanced delivery of large molecules into tibial growth plates. We tested the hypothesis that increasing hindlimb temperature from 22°C to 34°C increases vascular access of large systemic molecules, modeled using 10, 40, and 70 kDa dextrans that approximate sizes of physiological regulators. Vascular access was quantified by vessel diameter, velocity, and dextran leakage from subperichondrial plexus vessels and accumulation in growth plate cartilage. Growth plate entry of 10 kDa dextrans increased >150% at 34°C. Entry of 40 and 70 kDa dextrans increased <50%, suggesting a size-dependent temperature enhancement. Total dextran levels in the plexus increased at 34°C, but relative leakage out of vessels was not temperature dependent. Blood velocity and vessel diameter increased 118% and 31%, respectively, at 34°C. These results demonstrate that heat enhances vascular carrying capacity and bioavailability of large molecules around growth plates, suggesting that temperature could be a noninvasive strategy for modulating delivery of therapeutics to impaired growth plates of children.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3921350PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.01212.2013DOI Listing

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