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Jeannette Chloe Bulinski

· Professor Emerita of Biological Sciences and of Pathology and Cell Biology

Columbia University · Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology

Active 1957–2022

h-index46
Citations7.6k
Papers10612 last 5y
Funding$17.1M
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Research topics

  • Biomedical engineering
  • Materials science
  • Pathology
  • Medicine
  • Anatomy

Selected publications

  • Pulsed electromagnetic fields promote repair of focal articular cartilage defects with engineered osteochondral constructs

    Biotechnology and Bioengineering · 2020 · 28 citations

    • Biomedical engineering
    • Materials science
    • Anatomy

    Articular cartilage injuries are a common source of joint pain and dysfunction. We hypothesized that pulsed electromagnetic fields (PEMFs) would improve growth and healing of tissue-engineered cartilage grafts in a direction-dependent manner. PEMF stimulation of engineered cartilage constructs was first evaluated in vitro using passaged adult canine chondrocytes embedded in an agarose hydrogel scaffold. PEMF coils oriented parallel to the articular surface induced superior repair stiffness compared to both perpendicular PEMF (p = .026) and control (p = .012). This was correlated with increased glycosaminoglycan deposition in both parallel and perpendicular PEMF orientations compared to control (p = .010 and .028, respectively). Following in vitro optimization, the potential clinical translation of PEMF was evaluated in a preliminary in vivo preclinical adult canine model. Engineered osteochondral constructs (∅ 6 mm × 6 mm thick, devitalized bone base) were cultured to maturity and implanted into focal defects created in the stifle (knee) joint. To assess expedited early repair, animals were assessed after a 3-month recovery period, with microfracture repairs serving as an additional clinical control. In vivo, PEMF led to a greater likelihood of normal chondrocyte (odds ratio [OR]: 2.5, p = .051) and proteoglycan (OR: 5.0, p = .013) histological scores in engineered constructs. Interestingly, engineered constructs outperformed microfracture in clinical scoring, regardless of PEMF treatment (p < .05). Overall, the studies provided evidence that PEMF stimulation enhanced engineered cartilage growth and repair, demonstrating a potential low-cost, low-risk, noninvasive treatment modality for expediting early cartilage repair.

Recent grants

Frequent coauthors

  • Stéphane Bach

    55 shared
  • Claire Delehouzé

    44 shared
  • Blandine Baratte

    Laboratoire de Biologie Intégrative des Modèles Marins

    38 shared
  • Marie‐Thérèse Dimanche‐Boitrel

    29 shared
  • Sofia-Eléna Motuhi

    Institut de Recherche pour le Développement

    28 shared
  • Camilla Triscornia

    Laboratoire de Biologie Intégrative des Modèles Marins

    26 shared
  • Thomas Robert

    Sorbonne Université

    26 shared
  • Clark T. Hung

    Columbia University

    22 shared

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