(Press-News.org) By finding a way to bind a slippery molecule naturally found in the fluid that surrounds healthy joints, Johns Hopkins researchers have engineered surfaces that have the potential to deliver long-lasting lubrication at specific spots throughout the body. The finding, described in the Aug. 3 online edition of Nature Materials, could eventually offer a new way to ease the pain of arthritic joints, keep artificial joints working smoothly or even make contact lenses more comfortable.
According to the investigators, scientists have long known that a biochemical known as hyaluronic acid (HA), found in abundance in joints' synovial fluid, is an important component for naturally lubricating tissues. One form of HA also reduces inflammation and protects cells from metabolic damage. Diseased, damaged or aging joints in hips, knees, shoulders and elbows often have far lower concentrations of HA, presumably because a protein that binds HA molecules to joint surfaces is no longer able to retain HA where it is needed. HA injections into painful joints, known as viscosupplementation, have become a popular way to treat painful joints in the past several years. But without a way to retain HA at the site, the body's natural cleaning processes soon wash it away.
Seeking a way to tackle this problem, a team led by Jennifer H. Elisseeff, Ph.D., professor at the Wilmer Eye Institute at Johns Hopkins and in the Johns Hopkins University departments of Biomedical Engineering and of Materials Science and Engineering, looked to molecules known as HA-binding peptides (HABpeps) that stick to HA.
In the laboratory, using HABpep as a chemical handle, the researchers used a second synthetic molecule, polyethylene glycol, to tie HA onto surfaces that included natural and artificial cartilage.
Tests on tissues and in animals show that the bound HA didn't easily wash away, and it reduced friction as successfully as when these tissues were immersed in a bath of HA. When the researchers injected a HABpep designed to attach to cartilage in rat knees, then injected HA, that HA stuck around 12 times as long as it did in rats that hadn't been given HABpep, suggesting that these peptides could be a promising addition to viscosupplementation.
Though this material still has some time before it might be available to patients, Elisseeff notes its promise as another way scientists have looked to nature as an inspiration to solve medical problems.
"What I like about this concept is that we're mimicking natural functions that are lost using synthetic materials," Elisseeff says.
INFORMATION:
Other Johns Hopkins researchers who participated in this study include Anirudha Singh, Michael Corvelli, Shimon A. Unterman, Kevin A. Wepasnick and Peter McDonnel.
This work was supported by the National Institute on Aging (AG328232) the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (R01AR054005), the Arthritis Research Foundation, the Department of Defense, the Wallace H. Coulter Foundation, the Ort Philanthropic Fund and Research to Prevent Blindness.
Johns Hopkins Medicine
Media Relations and Public Affairs
Media Contact:
Lauren Nelson
410-955-8725; lnelso35@jhmi.edu
Taylor Graham
443-287-8560; tgraha10@jhmi.edu
Engineering long-lasting joint lubrication by mimicking nature
New material developed by Johns Hopkins scientists could someday ease pain
2014-08-18
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Quasi-legal drug 15 times stronger than heroin hides in plain sight
2014-08-18
Quasi-Legal Drug Fifteen Times Stronger Than Heroin Hides in Plain Sight
WASHINGTON – Emergency physicians should expect "an upswing in what on the surface appear to be heroin overdoses," but are actually overdoses tied to acetyl fentanyl, an opiate that is mixed into street drugs marketed as heroin. The looming threat of another unregulated quasi-legal drug is detailed today online in Annals of Emergency Medicine ("The Potential Threat of Acetyl Fentanyl: Legal Issues, Contaminated Heroin, and Acetyl Fentanyl 'Disguised' as Other Opiates") bit.ly/1sPiqUw.
"What's ...
New research explores the red v. blue state knowledge about abortion
2014-08-18
A new national survey reveals that the political divide among red-versus-blue states does not support the hypothesis that knowledge about abortion and health is shaped by the state in which one lives. Research led by Danielle Bessett, a University of Cincinnati assistant professor of sociology, was presented at the 109th Meeting of the American Sociological Association in San Francisco.
Bessett says that regardless of political viewpoints, only 13 percent of the 569 people polled in the national survey demonstrated high knowledge of abortion, correctly answering four ...
Applying new cholesterol guidelines to a patient population reduces heart attacks, strokes, study finds
2014-08-18
DALLAS – August 18, 2014 – A study from UT Southwestern researchers found that recently introduced cholesterol guidelines would significantly reduce new cardiovascular events, when compared to treatment based on previous cholesterol guidelines.
The research identified Dallas Heart Study participants in the 30 to 65 age range who would have newly qualified for statin use under the new cholesterol guidelines introduced in 2013 by the American College of Cardiology (ACC) and the American Heart Association (AHA).
In this subset of patients, the study predicted that 3.6 ...
Red eye feels endless? Blame the internet
2014-08-18
Once upon a time people planned their vacations by booking flights and hotel at local travel agencies. But with the Internet launching of hundreds of online flight vendors, travel agencies have virtually disappeared into the ether — and shorter flights have disappeared with them.
In a study scheduled for publication in The Review of Economics and Statistics, Dr. Itai Ater of Tel Aviv University's Recanati Business School and Dr. Eugene Orlov of Compass Lexecon examine how the Internet has affected performance and product quality in the airline industry, especially flight ...
Ten-hut: New discoveries on how military organization affects civilians
2014-08-18
Researchers are reporting new discoveries about how militarization affects the general, civilian population, and the biggest positive impact is adequate sanitation and access to education. The research led by Steve Carlton-Ford, professor and head of the University of Cincinnati Sociology Department, was presented at the 109th meeting of the American Sociological Association in San Francisco.
Pooling data from UNICEF, the World Bank, the Peace Research Institute of Oslo (PRIO) the Integrated Network for Societal Conflict Research and the Quality of Government Institute, ...
Dress for success: Research examines male influences on 'looking' middle class
2014-08-18
They might be called a chip off the old block, but when it comes to upward social mobility, they might call Dad a lesson in what not to wear. University of Cincinnati research takes a new approach to examining the socialization of male children into the middle class. The research by Erynn Masi de Casanova, a University of Cincinnati assistant professor of sociology, was presented at the 109th Meeting of the American Sociological Association in San Francisco.
Based on interviews with 71 male, white-collar workers in three major metropolitan cities, Casanova explores how ...
Family members of victims pose a growing challenge for capital punishment
2014-08-18
An examination of the nation's history in carrying out executions is encountering a new challenge for modern-day capital punishment.
Bringing in family members of victims to witness executions brings about a new source of pressure on the execution, complicating actual execution arrangements and the position of capital punishment in the public imagination, according to Annulla Linders, a University of Cincinnati associate professor of sociology. Linders' research, titled, "Bearing Witness: Victim's Relatives and Challenges to the Execution Narrative," was presented at ...
Rheumatologic diseases like lupus can initially look like neurological disorders
2014-08-18
MAYWOOD, Ill. – Lupus and other rheumatologic diseases can initially present as neurological disorders such as headaches and seizures, and thus delay diagnosis for many months, according to Loyola University Medical Center neurologists.
Moreover, treatments for rheumatologic disorders can cause adverse neurological effects, Dr. Sean Ruland and colleagues report in the journal Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports.
Rheumatologic diseases include autoimmune and inflammatory disorders of the joints and soft tissues, such as lupus, systemic vasculitis and ankylosing ...
Despite academic achievement, pay gaps likely continue between the races
2014-08-18
A nationally representative comparison of salary, academic achievement and race finds that racial and gender inequality continue to exist regardless of academic success. The study by Ervin (Maliq) Matthew, a University of Cincinnati assistant professor of sociology, was presented at the 109th Meeting of the American Sociological Association in San Francisco.
Matthew's research paper, titled"Making the (Pay) Grade: Racial Variance in Financial Payoff to Academic Success," examined data from the National Education Longitudinal Survey from 1988-2000. The study followed approximately ...
Life after prison: Sociology professor presents findings on research
2014-08-18
Todd Callais, an assistant professor of Sociology at UC Blue Ash College, presented his findings on how ex-inmates cope with life after prison at the American Sociological Association (ASA) Annual Meeting, held August 16–19 in San Francisco.
As part of his three-year research for a new book, Callais conducted in-depth interviews with a total of 60 ex-offenders, but he focused specifically on 13 former inmates for his presentation, titled Ex-offenders and Stigma Management: Redemptive Contestation.
Roughly two-thirds of former inmates in the U.S. eventually return to ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
A map for single-atom catalysts
What about tritiated water release from Fukushima? Ocean model simulations provide an objective scientific knowledge on the long-term tritium distribution
Growing crisis of communicable disease in Canada in tandem with US cuts
Women get better at managing their anger as they age
Illegal shark product trade evident in Australia and New Zealand
New search tool brings 21% better accuracy for robotics developers
New model extracts sentence-level proof to verify events, boosting fact-checking accuracy for journalists, legal teams, and policymakers
Efficient carbon integration of CO₂ in propane aromatization over acidic zeolites
FPGA-accelerated AI for demultiplexing multimode fiber towards next-generation communications
Vitamin D3 nanoemulsion significantly improves core symptoms in children with autism: A clinical trial
Microfluidic point-of-care device accurately measures bilirubin in blood serum: A pilot study
Amygdalin shows strong binding and stabilizing effects on HER2 receptor: A computational study for breast cancer therapy
Bond behavior of FRP bars in concrete under reversed cyclic loading: an experimental study
Milky Way-like galaxy M83 consumes high-speed clouds
Study: What we learned from record-breaking 2021 heat wave and what we can expect in the future
Transforming treatment outcomes for people with OCD
Damage from smoke and respiratory viruses mitigated in mice via a common signaling pathway
New software tool could help better understand childhood cancer
Healthy lifestyle linked to lower diverticulitis risk, irrespective of genetic susceptibility
Women 65+ still at heightened risk of cervical cancer caused by HPV
‘Inflammatory’ diet during pregnancy may raise child’s diabetes type 1 risk
Effective therapies needed to halt rise in eco-anxiety, says psychology professor
Nature-friendly farming boosts biodiversity and yields but may require new subsidies
Against the odds: Endometriosis linked to four times higher pregnancy rates than other causes of infertility, new study reveals
Microplastics discovered in human reproductive fluids, new study reveals
Family ties and firm performance: How cousin marriage traditions shape informal businesses in Africa
Novel flu vaccine adjuvant improves protection against influenza viruses, study finds
Manipulation of light at the nanoscale helps advance biosensing
New mechanism discovered in ovarian cancer peritoneal metastasis: YWHAB restriction drives stemness and chemoresistance
New study links blood metabolites and immune cells to increased risk of urolithiasis
[Press-News.org] Engineering long-lasting joint lubrication by mimicking natureNew material developed by Johns Hopkins scientists could someday ease pain