995 resultados para BONE HEALING
Resumo:
Bone remodeling is regulated by the two branches of the autonomic nervous system: the adrenergic and the cholinergic branches. Adrenergic activity favors bone loss, whereas cholinergic activity has been recently shown to favor bone mass accrual. In vitro studies have reported that cholinergic activity induces proliferation and differentiation of bone cells. In vivo studies have shown that the inhibition of cholinergic activity favors bone loss, whereas its stimulation favors bone mass accrual. Clinical studies have shown that bone density is associated with the function of many cholinergic-regulated tissues such as the hypothalamus, salivary glands, lacrimal glands and langerhans cells, suggesting a common mechanism of control. Altogether, these observations and linked findings are of great significance since they improve our understanding of bone physiology. These discoveries have been successfully used recently to investigate new promising therapies for bone diseases based on cholinergic stimulation. Here, we review the current understanding of the cholinergic activity and its association with bone health.
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Different cell sources for bone tissue engineering are reviewed. In particular, adult cell source strategies have been based on the implantation of unfractionated fresh bone marrow; purified, culture expanded mesenchymal stem cells, differentiated osteoblasts, or cells that have been modified genetically to express rhBMP. Several limiting factors are mentioned for these strategies such as low number of available cells or possible immunological reaction of the host. Foetal bone cells are presented as an alternative solution and review of actual treatments using these cells is presented. Finally, foetal cells used specifically for bone tissue engineering are characterised and potentially interesting therapeutic options are proposed.
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X-ray is a technology that is used for numerous applications in the medical field. The process of X-ray projection gives a 2-dimension (2D) grey-level texture from a 3- dimension (3D) object. Until now no clear demonstration or correlation has positioned the 2D texture analysis as a valid indirect evaluation of the 3D microarchitecture. TBS is a new texture parameter based on the measure of the experimental variogram. TBS evaluates the variation between 2D image grey-levels. The aim of this study was to evaluate existing correlations between 3D bone microarchitecture parameters - evaluated from μCT reconstructions - and the TBS value, calculated on 2D projected images. 30 dried human cadaveric vertebrae were acquired on a micro-scanner (eXplorer Locus, GE) at isotropic resolution of 93 μm. 3D vertebral body models were used. The following 3D microarchitecture parameters were used: Bone volume fraction (BV/TV), Trabecular thickness (TbTh), trabecular space (TbSp), trabecular number (TbN) and connectivity density (ConnD). 3D/2D projections has been done by taking into account the Beer-Lambert Law at X-ray energy of 50, 100, 150 KeV. TBS was assessed on 2D projected images. Correlations between TBS and the 3D microarchitecture parameters were evaluated using a linear regression analysis. Paired T-test is used to assess the X-ray energy effects on TBS. Multiple linear regressions (backward) were used to evaluate relationships between TBS and 3D microarchitecture parameters using a bootstrap process. BV/TV of the sample ranged from 18.5 to 37.6% with an average value at 28.8%. Correlations' analysis showedthat TBSwere strongly correlatedwith ConnD(0.856≤r≤0.862; p<0.001),with TbN (0.805≤r≤0.810; p<0.001) and negatively with TbSp (−0.714≤r≤−0.726; p<0.001), regardless X-ray energy. Results show that lower TBS values are related to "degraded" microarchitecture, with low ConnD, low TbN and a high TbSp. The opposite is also true. X-ray energy has no effect onTBS neither on the correlations betweenTBS and the 3Dmicroarchitecture parameters. In this study, we demonstrated that TBS was significantly correlated with 3D microarchitecture parameters ConnD and TbN, and negatively with TbSp, no matter what X-ray energy has been used. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled ECTS 2011. Disclosure of interest: None declared.
Resumo:
A newly identified cytokine, osteoprotegerin (OPG) appears to be involved in the regulation of bone remodeling. In vitro studies suggest that OPG, a soluble member of the TNF receptor family of proteins, inhibits osteoclastogenesis by interrupting the intercellular signaling between osteoblastic stromal cells and osteoclast progenitors. As patients with chronic renal failure (CRF) often have renal osteodystrophy (ROD), we investigated the role of osteoprotegerin (OPG) in ROD, and investigated whether there was any relationship between serum OPG, intact parathyroid (PTH) (iPTH), vitamin D, and trabecular bone. Serum OPG combined with iPTH might be a useful tool in the noninvasive diagnosis of ROD, at least in cases in which the range of PTH values compromises reliable diagnosis. Thirty-six patients on maintenance hemodiafiltration (HDF) and a control group of 36 age and sex matched healthy subjects with no known metabolic bone disease were studied. The following assays were made on serum: iPTH, osteocalcin (BGP), bone alkaline phosphatase, 25(OH)-cholecalciferol, calcium, phosphate, OPG, IGF-1, estradiol, and free testosterone. Serum Ca++, P, B-ALP, BGP, IGF-1, iPTH, and OPG levels were significantly higher in HDF patients than in controls, while DXA measurements and quantitative ultrasound (QUS) parameters were significantly lower. On grouping patients according to their mean OPG levels, we observed significantly lower serum IGF-1, vitamin D3 concentrations, and lumbar spine and hip bone mineral density in the high OPG groups. No correlation was found between OPG and bone turnover markers, whereas a negative correlation was found between serum OPG and IGF-1 levels (r=-0.64, p=0.032). Serum iPTH concentrations were positively correlated with bone alkaline phosphatase (B-ALP) (r=0.69, p=0.038) and BGP (r=0.92, p<0.001). The findings made suggest that an increase in OPG levels may be a compensatory response to elevated bone loss. The low bone mineral density (BMD) levels found in the high OPG group might have been due to the significant decrease in serum IGF-1 and vitamin D3 observed. In conclusion, the findings made in the present study demonstrate that increased OPG in hemodiafiltration patients is only partly due to decreased renal clearance. As it may partly reflect a compensatory response to increased bone loss, this parameter might be helpful in the identification of patients with a marked reduction in trabecular BMD.
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BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES Aging enhances frequency of chronic diseases like cardiovascular diseases or periodontitis. Here we reproduced an age-dependent model of the periodontium, a fully physiological approach to periodontal conditions, to evaluate the impact of dietary fat type on gingival tissue of young (6 months old) and old (24 months old) rats. METHODS/FINDINGS Animals were fed life-long on diets based on monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFA) as virgin olive oil, n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids (n-6PUFA), as sunflower oil, or n-3PUFA, as fish oil. Age-related alveolar bone loss was higher in n-6PUFA fed rats, probably as a consequence of the ablation of the cell capacity to adapt to aging. Gene expression analysis suggests that MUFA or n-3PUFA allowed mitochondria to maintain an adequate turnover through induction of biogenesis, autophagy and the antioxidant systems, and avoiding mitochondrial electron transport system alterations. CONCLUSIONS The main finding is that the enhanced alveolar bone loss associated to age may be targeted by an appropriate dietary treatment. The mechanisms involved in this phenomenon are related with an ablation of the cell capacity to adapt to aging. Thus, MUFA or n-3PUFA might allow mitochondrial maintaining turnover through biogenesis or autophagy. They might also be able to induce the corresponding antioxidant systems to counteract age-related oxidative stress, and do not inhibit mitochondrial electron transport chain. From the nutritional and clinical point of view, it is noteworthy that the potential treatments to attenuate alveolar bone loss (a feature of periodontal disease) associated to age could be similar to some of the proposed for the prevention and treatment of cardiovascular diseases, a group of pathologies recently associated with age-related periodontitis.
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Leishmania major infection induces self-healing cutaneous lesions in C57BL/6 mice. Both IL-12 and IFN-γ are essential for the control of infection. We infected Jun dimerization protein p21SNFT (Batf3(-/-) ) mice (C57BL/6 background) that lack the major IL-12 producing and cross-presenting CD8α(+) and CD103(+) DC subsets. Batf3(-/-) mice displayed enhanced susceptibility with larger lesions and higher parasite burden. Additionally, cells from draining lymph nodes of infected Batf3(-/-) mice secreted less IFN-γ, but more Th2- and Th17-type cytokines, mirrored by increased serum IgE and Leishmania-specific immunoglobulin 1 (Th2 indicating). Importantly, CD8α(+) DCs isolated from lymph nodes of L. major-infected mice induced significantly more IFN-γ secretion by L. major-stimulated immune T cells than CD103(+) DCs. We next developed CD11c-diptheria toxin receptor: Batf3(-/-) mixed bone marrow chimeras to determine when the DCs are important for the control of infection. Mice depleted of Batf-3-dependent DCs from day 17 or wild-type mice depleted of cross-presenting DCs from 17-19 days after infection maintained significantly larger lesions similar to mice whose Batf-3-dependent DCs were depleted from the onset of infection. Thus, we have identified a crucial role for Batf-3-dependent DCs in protection against L. major.
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Low-grade osteosarcoma is a rare malignancy that may be subdivided into two main subgroups on the basis of location in relation to the bone cortex, that is, parosteal osteosarcoma and low-grade central osteosarcoma. Their histological appearance is quite similar and characterized by spindle cell stroma with low-to-moderate cellularity and well-differentiated anastomosing bone trabeculae. Low-grade osteosarcomas have a simple genetic profile with supernumerary ring chromosomes comprising amplification of chromosome 12q13-15, including the cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (CDK4) and murine double-minute type 2 (MDM2) gene region. Low-grade osteosarcoma can be confused with fibrous and fibro-osseous lesions such as fibromatosis and fibrous dysplasia on radiological and histological findings. We investigated MDM2-CDK4 immunohistochemical expression in a series of 72 low-grade osteosarcomas and 107 fibrous or fibro-osseous lesions of the bone or paraosseous soft tissue. The MDM2-CDK4 amplification status of low-grade osteosarcoma was also evaluated by comparative genomic hybridization array in 18 cases, and the MDM2 amplification status was evaluated by fluorescence in situ hybridization or quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction in 31 cases of benign fibrous and fibro-osseous lesions. MDM2-CDK4 immunostaining and MDM2 amplification by fluorescence in situ hybridization or quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction were investigated in a control group of 23 cases of primary high-grade bone sarcoma, including 20 conventional high-grade osteosarcomas, two pleomorphic spindle cell sarcomas/malignant fibrous histiocytomas and one leiomyosarcoma. The results showed that MDM2 and/or CDK4 immunoreactivity was present in 89% of low-grade osteosarcoma specimens. All benign fibrous and fibro-osseous lesions and the tumors of the control group were negative for MDM2 and CDK4. These results were consistent with the MDM2 and CDK4 amplification results. In conclusion, immunohistochemical expression of MDM2 and CDK4 is specific and provides sensitive markers for the diagnosis of low-grade osteosarcomas, helping to differentiate them from benign fibrous and fibro-osseous lesions, particularly in cases with atypical radio-clinical presentation and/or limited biopsy samples.
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Intracellular signals elicited by LDLs are likely to play a role in the pathogenesis associated with increased LDL blood levels. We have previously determined that LDL stimulation of human skin fibroblasts, used as a model system for adventitial fibroblasts, activates p38 mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs), followed by IL-8 production and increased wound-healing capacity of the cells. The proximal events triggering these responses had not been characterized, however. Here we show that MAPK kinases MKK3 and MKK6, but not MKK4, are the upstream kinases responsible for the activation of the p38 MAPKs and stimulation of wound closure in response to LDLs. Phosphoinositide 3 kinases (PI3Ks) and Ras have been suggested to participate in lipoprotein-induced MAPK activation. However, specific PI3K inhibitors or expression of a dominant-negative form of Ras failed to blunt LDL-induced p38 MAPK activation. The classical LDL receptor does not participate in LDL signaling, but the contribution of other candidate lipoprotein receptors has not been investigated. Using cells derived from scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) knockout mice or the BLT-1 SR-BI inhibitor, we now show that this receptor is required for LDLs to stimulate p38 MAPKs and to promote wound healing. Identification of MKK3/6 and SR-BI as cellular relays in LDL-mediated p38 activation further defines the signaling events that could participate in LDL-mediated pathophysiological responses.
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Les cellules dendritiques (DCs) sont des cellules multifonctionnelles qui font le lien entre le sytème immunitaire inné et adaptatif chez les mammifères. Il existe plusieurs sous-types de DCs basés sur leurs fonctions et l'endroit où elles se situent dans le corps. Dans le cadre de cette thèse, nous avons étudié le rôle de ces cellules face à une infection parasitaire. La Leishmania est un parasite causant une maladie appelée Leishmaniose, maladie endémique de l'Afrique, de l'Asie et de certaines régions de l'Amérique du Sud. Certaines espèces causent des lésions cutanées, alors que d'autres causent des lésions dans les muqueuses ou dans les organes internes. Le système immunitaire répond en générant une réponse inflammatoire qui élimine l'infection. Lors d'une réponse non-inflammatoire (de type cytokines, chemokines), cela va amener à une persistance du parasite sur le long terme. Les DC s'activant en présence du parasite dans la peau, vont le transporter vers un ganglion. A cet endroit, se trouvent différents sous-types de DC qui ont la particularité de présenter l'antigène (spécifique à la Leishmaniose) aux lymphocytes T, ce qui va alors amener à une réponse immunitaire puissante contre le parasite. Nous avons comparé différentes espèces de Leishmaniose dans leur façon d'activer les DC et différents modèles de souris ont été utilisé dans ce but-là. Les souris du type C57BL/6 sont connues pour être résistantes à L. major et sensibles à L. mexicana, alors qu'au contraire, les souris Balb/c sont connues pour être sensibles à ces deux espèces. En utilisant des parasites fluorescents transgéniques, nous avons comparé ces deux espèces de parasites (L. major et L. mexicana) en recherchant quelles cellules elles sont capables d'infecter in-vivo dans un modèle murin. Le rôle général des DC dans une infection à L. major a déjà été décrit. Dans notre étude, nous avons étudié le besoin en DC CD8a+ dans les ganglions afin d'engendrer une réponse face à une infection à L. major. Les souris qui n'ont pas ce sous-type de DC sont beaucoup plus sensibles à l'infection : elles ont des marqueurs inflammatoires plus bas et des lésions plus grandes. Nous avons également remarqué que les DC CD8a+ jouent un rôle crucial dans une phase plus avancée de l'infection. Dans notre laboratoire, nous avons la chance d'avoir une source illimitée de DCs de sous-type CD8a+ provenant d'une souris génétiquement modifiée par nos soin. Grâce à cela, nous avons utilisé ces cellules CD8a+ pour immuniser des rats afin de produire des anticorps monoclonaux ayant des propriétés spécifiques comme l'identification de protéines uniques présentes à la surface des DC et qui ensuite, modulent une réponse immunitaire in-vivo. Nous sommes actuellement en phase de caractérisation de plus de 750 hybridomes générés dans notre laboratoire. - Les cellules dendritiques (DCs) constituent le lien entre le système inné et adaptatif de la réponse immunitaire, car elles sont capables de présenter l'antigène, de donner la co- stimulation et de relâcher des cytokines et chimokines. Au cours de cette thèse, nous avons exploré différentes familles de DC lors d'infections parasitaires, telles que la Leishmaniose, parasite intracellulaire qui infecte les mammifères. La plupart des lésions cutanées résistantes sont caractérisées par une réponse pro-inflammatoire générée par l'IL-12. A l'inverse, pour la forme non résistante, la réponse est générée par l'IL-4 et l'IL-10, dans les modèles murins vulnérables. L'infection avec Lmajor a été caractérisée chez la souris C57BL/6 (Thl) et chez la souris Balb/c (Th2). Chez la souris C57BL/6 la lésion guérit, alors que chez la souris Balb/c, la lésion est au contraire non-cicatrisante. Nous avons comparé l'activation causée dans l'ensemble des DC par différentes espéces de Leishmania, et plus spécifiquement dans les DC CD8a+ présentes dans les ganglions lymphatiques et leur rôle dans la vulnérabilité à L. major. Ces cellules sont spécialisées dans la présentation croisée d'antigènes exogènes par le CMH-I et le haut taux de production d'IL-12 après activation. En utilisant des DC dérivées de moelle osseuse, nous avons constaté que L. guyanensis V+ (transportant un retrovirus) était le plus efficace pour l'activation des DC in-vitro comparé à L. major, L. mexicana et L. guyanensis (V-). Toutefois, in-vivo, les souris infectées avec L. major ont vu la taille de leur ganglions lymphatiques drainants augmentée, 3-6 semaines après l'infection dans les deux espèces de souris (les C57BL/6 résistantes et les Balb/c sensibles). En utilisant un parasite fluorescent transgénique, nous avons trouvé que les souris C57BL/6 sensibles à Lmexicana ont un nombre plus important de cellules Β infectées et un plus petit nombre de DC dérivées des monocytes inflammatoires, comparé au souris infectées avec L. major. Les conséquences de ces observations sont encore à l'étude. Des souris déficientes en CD8ct+DC et CD103+ sont plus sensibles à L. major que les souris WT: leurs lésions sont plus grandes et la charge parasitaire est plus importante. Nous avons généré une chimère de moelles osseuse CD11-DTR et Batf3-/- en mélangeant les moelles de ces deux souris, afin de déterminer le temps après infection où le manque de DC's CD8a+ contribue le plus à l'augmentation de la vulnérabilité chez la souris KO. Ces souris produisent plus d'IgG1 et IgE, font une réponse Th2 plus forte et Thl moins forte. Nous avons constaté que les souris déficientes en DC CD8a+ au début de la réponse immunitaire adaptive (trois semaines après injection) maintiennent un haut taux de lésions de grande taille, semblable à celui des souris chez qui les cellules ont été déplétées avant l'injection. Cela indique que les DC CD8a+ sont nécessaires pour l'efficacité de l'immunité dans la phase chronique de l'infection à L. major. Parallèlement à cela, nous avons aussi commencé une génération d'anticorps monoclonaux dirigés contre les DC CD8a+ activés en utilisant des souches établies dans notre laboratoire. En partant d'une librairie de 763 hybridomes, nous avons identifié plusieurs clones dignes d'intérêt avec une capacité fonctionnelle à moduler la prolifération et la sécrétion de cytokines des cellules T, ainsi que les molécules de co-stimulation présentes à la surface des DC activées elle-même. - Dendritic cells (DCs) are the bridge between the innate and the adaptive arms of the immune systems. They are professional antigen presentation cells and have important cytokine/chemokine release functions. In this dissertation we have focussed on the study of the different subsets of DCs in parasitic infection immunity. Leishmania are intra-cellular parasites of many different species that infect mammals. Most cutaneous lesions that are self- healing are characterized with a pro-inflammatory response with IL-12 while high levels of cytokines such as IL-4 and IL-10 characterized in susceptible mouse models. In mice L. major infection has been well characterized in C57BL/6 mice (Thl) that form healing lesions while Balb/c mice (Th2) form non-healing lesions. This thesis is focussed on comparing DC activation at large by different strains of Leishmania and more specifically, dLN resident CD8a+ DCs and their role in L. major susceptibility. This subset is specialized in cross- presentation of exogenous antigens in the MHC-I pathway and produce high levels of EL-12. Using bone marrow derived DCs we found that L. guyanensis V+ (carrying a retro-virus) was the most efficient at activating DCs in-vitro. In-vivo however L. major infected mice had the largest dLNs 3-6 weeks after infection in both genetically resistant C57BL/6 and susceptible Balb/c mice. Using transgenic fluorescent parasites, we found that C57BL/6 mice which are susceptible to L. mexicana had more number of infected Β cells and fewer number of infected inflammatory monocyte derived DCs in contrast to L. major infection. Using mice deficient in CD8a+ DCs, we found that these mice were more susceptible to L. major than their WT counterparts. They made larger lesions, had higher parasite burdens, higher levels of Th2 indicating immunolgloblins as measured by higher serie IgE levels and lower CD4+ IFNy+ cells. A mixed bone marrow chimera system of CDllc-DTR and Batf3~'~ was generated to determine the time point at which the lack of CD8a+ DCs most contributes to the increased susceptibility in KO mice. We found that mice depleted of CD8a+ DCs at the advent of the adaptive response (3 weeks after infection) maintained the significantly higher lesion size similar to mice whose cells were depleted from the onset of infection. This indicates that CD8a+ DCs are required for effective immunity in the chronic phase of L. major infection. We also began the generation of a valuable tool of monoclonal antibodies against activated CD8a+ DCs using our in-house DC line. From a library of 763 hybridomas we have identified several interesting clones with a functional ability to modulate Τ cell proliferation and cytokine secretion as well as down-modulating co-stimulatory molecules on activated DC cells themselves.
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Inflammation is a protective attempt by the host to remove injurious stimuli and initiate the tissue healing process. The inflammatory response must be actively terminated, however, because failure to do so can result in 'bystander' damage to tissues and diseases such as arthritis or type-2 diabetes. Yet the mechanisms controlling excessive inflammatory responses are still poorly understood. Here we show that mouse effector and memory CD4(+) T cells abolish macrophage inflammasome-mediated caspase-1 activation and subsequent interleukin 1beta release in a cognate manner. Inflammasome inhibition is observed for all tested NLRP1 (commonly called NALP1) and NLRP3 (NALP3 or cryopyrin) activators, whereas NLRC4 (IPAF) inflammasome function and release of other inflammatory mediators such as CXCL2, interleukin 6 and tumour necrosis factor are not affected. Suppression of the NLRP3 inflammasome requires cell-to-cell contact and can be mimicked by macrophage stimulation with selected ligands of the tumour necrosis factor family, such as CD40L (also known as CD40LG). In a NLRP3-dependent peritonitis model, effector CD4(+) T cells are responsible for decreasing neutrophil recruitment in an antigen-dependent manner. Our findings reveal an unexpected mechanism of inflammasome inhibition, whereby effector and memory T cells suppress potentially damaging inflammation, yet leave the primary inflammatory response, crucial for the onset of immunity, intact.
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Critical limb ischemia in diabetic patients is associated with high rates of morbidity and mortality. Suboptimal responses to the available medical and surgical treatments are common in these patients, who also demonstrate limited vascular homeostasis. Neovasculogenesis induced by stem cell therapy could be a useful approach for these patients. Neovasculogenesis and clinical improvement were compared at baseline and at 3 and 12 months after autologous bone marrow-derived mononuclear cell (BMMNC) transplantation in diabetic patients with peripheral artery disease. We conducted a prospective study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of intra-arterial administration of autologous BMMNCs (100-400 × 10(6) cells) in 20 diabetic patients with severe below-the-knee arterial ischemia. Although the time course of clinical effects differed among patients, after 12 months of follow-up all patients presented a notable improvement in the Rutherford-Becker classification, the University of Texas diabetic wound scales, and the Ankle-Brachial Index in the target limb. The clinical outcome was consistent with neovasculogenesis, which was assessed at 3 months by digital subtraction angiography and quantified by MetaMorph software. Unfortunately, local cell therapy in the target limb had no beneficial effect on the high mortality rate in these patients. In diabetic patients with critical limb ischemia, intra-arterial perfusion of BMMNCs is a safe procedure that generates a significant increase in the vascular network in ischemic areas and promotes remarkable clinical improvement.
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Here we present a processing route to produce multi-structured ceramic foams based on the combination of particle-stabilized foams with polymeric sponges to produce positive and negative templating structures. Polyester sponges are infiltrated with freshly produced calcium aluminate alumina foams and upon sintering either positive templating structures are produced when wetting the sponges, or negative templating foams with a percolating pore network are obtained when completely filling the sponges. Additionally, by combining different layers of these particle-stabilized foam infiltrated sponges, various different structures can be produced, including sandwich structures, pore size gradients, and ceramic bone-like structures applying to different types of bone. The particle-stabilized foams used were in situ self-hardening calcium aluminate cement enriched alumina foams to obtain crack-free samples with pore interconnections and tailorable pore sizes.