S-100 Protein Immunostaining Identifies Cells Expressing a Chondrocytic Phenotype During Articular Cartilage Repair
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The healing of articular surface defects has been studied with conventional histology, which relies on the staining of the extracellular matrix to identify the phenotype of the cells present. A chondrospecific cellular marker would be useful. S-100 protein has been found in all chondroid tissues studied, and we evaluated its usefulness in the study of articular cartilage repair. Full-thickness rabbit femoral condylar defects were made, and the specimens were studied at serial time intervals. S-100 protein staining positively showed chondroid cells in the 7- and 14-day specimens, which were not identifiable by conventional techniques. At 30 and 60 days, an S-100 positive band of cells separated a deep safranin-O positive hypertrophic layer from a fibrocellular surface layer. At 120 days, the presence of S-100 protein identified cells with chondrogenic potential, and the lack of S-100 protein in other cells embedded in conventionally stained matrix suggested that these cells were no longer of a chondroid phenotype. The presence of S-100 protein-identified chondroid cells early in the repair process when the cells had not begun to synthesize conventionally stainable matrix and the lack of S-100 protein in cells late in the repair positively identified a phenotypic change earlier than conventional histology.
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