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Minoxidil decreases collagen I deposition and tissue-like contraction in clubfoot-derived cells: a way to improve conservative treatment of relapsed clubfoot?

Jarmila Knitlová, Martina Doubková, Martin Plencner, David Vondrášek, Adam Eckhardt, Martin Ošťádal, Jana Musı́lková, Lucie Bačáková, Tomáš Novotný

2020Connective Tissue Research15 citationsDOI

Abstract

AIM: antifibrotic effects of minoxidil on clubfoot-derived cells. METHODS: Cell viability and proliferation were quantified by xCELLigence, MTS, and LIVE/DEAD assays. The amount of collagen I deposited into the extracellular matrix was quantified using immunofluorescence with subsequent image segmentation analysis, hydroxyproline assay, and Second Harmonic Generation imaging. Extracellular matrix contraction was studied in a 3D model of cell-populated collagen gel lattices. RESULTS: MXD concentrations of 0.25, 0.5, and 0.75 mM inhibited the cell proliferation in a concentration-dependent manner without causing a cytotoxic effect. Exposure to ≥0.5 mM MXD resulted in a decrease in collagen type I accumulation after 8 and 21 days in culture. Changes in collagen fiber assembly were observed by immunofluorescence microscopy and nonlinear optical microscopy (second harmonic generation). MXD also inhibited the contraction of cell-populated collagen lattices (0.5 mM by 22%; 0.75 mM by 28%). CONCLUSIONS: inhibitory effect on the cell proliferation, collagen accumulation, and extracellular matrix contraction processes that are associated with clubfoot fibrosis. This study provides important preliminary results demonstrating the potential relevance of MXD for adjuvant pharmacological therapy in standard treatment of relapsed clubfoot.

Topics & Concepts

Extracellular matrixChemistryHydroxyprolineFibroblastContraction (grammar)FibrosisIn vitroPathologyBiochemistryEndocrinologyMedicineFoot and Ankle SurgeryTendon Structure and TreatmentLower Extremity Biomechanics and Pathologies
Minoxidil decreases collagen I deposition and tissue-like contraction in clubfoot-derived cells: a way to improve conservative treatment of relapsed clubfoot? | Litcius