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1.
OBJECTIVE: To map aggrecan cleavage by matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and aggrecanases in normal murine tibial articular cartilage (CBA strain) and in the development of spontaneous osteoarthritis (OA) in the STR/ort mouse and to assess the influence of sex hormone status on these conditions in gonadectomized STR/ort mice. METHODS: The distributions of neoepitopes of aggrecan generated by MMP (VDIPEN) and aggrecanase (NITEGE) cleavage were investigated by immunohistochemistry. RESULTS: VDIPEN neoepitope was detected mainly in the pericellular matrix of deep-zone chondrocytes in normal tibial cartilage from STR/ort and CBA mice. In early OA, VDIPEN immunostaining also localized to the pericellular matrix of chondrocytes at the site of the lesion. With increasing severity of OA lesions, VDIPEN immunostaining was also detected in the interterritorial matrix, close to the site of the lesion. In contrast, NITEGE mapped most strongly to the pericellular matrix of upper-zone chondrocytes in normal tibial cartilage. As with VDIPEN, NITEGE was strongly expressed in the pericellular matrix at the site of early OA lesions. With advancing OA, NITEGE colocalized with VDIPEN in both the pericellular and interterritorial matrices of chondrocytes adjacent to OA lesions and in those of the deep zones. Hormone status did not appear to influence the development of OA or the distribution of aggrecan neoepitopes in STR/ort mice. CONCLUSION: MMP- and aggrecanase-generated neoepitopes map predominantly to different regions in normal murine tibial cartilage. However, both groups of enzymes generate increased amounts of neoepitopes in pericellular and interterritorial matrix adjacent to histopathologic lesions of OA. Aggrecan degradation and the development of OA appear to be independent of sex hormone status in this model.  相似文献   

2.

Objective

To investigate the development of osteoarthritis (OA) after transection of the medial collateral ligament and partial medial meniscectomy in mice in which genes encoding either interleukin‐1β (IL‐1β), IL‐1β–converting enzyme (ICE), stromelysin 1, or inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) were deleted.

Methods

Sectioning of the medial collateral ligament and partial medial meniscectomy were performed on right knee joints of wild‐type and knockout mice. Left joints served as unoperated controls. Serial histologic sections were obtained from throughout the whole joint of both knees 4 days or 1, 2, 3, or 4 weeks after surgery. Sections were graded for OA lesions on a scale of 0–6 and were assessed for breakdown of tibial cartilage matrix proteoglycan (aggrecan) and type II collagen by matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and aggrecanases with immunohistochemistry studies using anti‐VDIPEN, anti‐NITEGE, and Col2‐3/4Cshort neoepitope antibodies. Proteoglycan depletion was assessed by Alcian blue staining and chondrocyte cell death, with the TUNEL technique.

Results

All knockout mice showed accelerated development of OA lesions in the medial tibial cartilage after surgery, compared with wild‐type mice. ICE‐, iNOS‐, and particularly IL‐1β–knockout mice developed OA lesions in the lateral cartilage of unoperated limbs. Development of focal histopathologic lesions was accompanied by increased levels of MMP‐, aggrecanase‐, and collagenase‐generated cleavage neoepitopes in areas around lesions, while nonlesional areas showed no change in immunostaining. Extensive cell death was also detected by TUNEL staining in focal areas around lesions.

Conclusion

We postulate that deletion of each of these genes, which encode molecules capable of producing degenerative changes in cartilage, leads to changes in the homeostatic controls regulating the balance between anabolism and catabolism, favoring accelerated cartilage degeneration. These observations suggest that these genes may play important regulatory roles in maintaining normal homeostasis in articular cartilage matrix turnover.
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3.

Objective

To investigate the in vivo effect of an imbalance between metalloproteinases and their inhibitors, tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMPs), in mouse articular cartilage.

Methods

Hind joints of Timp3−/− and wild‐type mice were examined by routine staining and by immunohistochemical analysis using antibodies specific for type X collagen and for the neoepitopes produced on proteolytic cleavage of aggrecan (… VDIPEN and … NVTEGE) and type II collagen. The neoepitope generated on cleavage of type II collagen by collagenases was quantitated in sera by enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay.

Results

Articular cartilage from Timp3‐knockout animals (ages ≥6 months) showed reduced Safranin O staining and an increase in …VDIPEN content compared with cartilage from heterozygous and wild‐type animals. There was also a slight increase in … NVTEGE content in articular cartilage and menisci of Timp3−/− animals. Chondrocytes showed strong pericellular staining for type II collagen cleavage neoepitopes, particularly in the superficial layer, in knockout mice. Also, there was more type X collagen expression in the superficial zone of articular cartilage, especially around clusters of proliferating chondrocytes, in the knockout mice. More type II collagen cleavage product was found in the serum of Timp3−/− mice compared with wild‐type animals. This increase was significant in 15‐month‐old animals.

Conclusion

These results indicate that TIMP‐3 deficiency results in mild cartilage degradation similar to changes seen in patients with osteoarthritis, suggesting that an imbalance between metalloproteinases and TIMP‐3 may play a pathophysiologic role in the development of this disease.
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4.

Objective

To explore the involvement of synovial macrophages in early cartilage damage in osteoarthritis (OA), and to identify the role of matrix metalloproteinase 3 (MMP‐3) in the pathology of early and late OA.

Methods

The role of synovial macrophages in MMP‐mediated damage in OA was studied by depleting synovial macrophages prior to elicitation of a collagenase‐induced instability model of OA. The expression of MMP in synovium and cartilage was monitored using TaqMan analysis. In spontaneous and induced OA, cartilage pathology was scored in MMP‐3–knockout mice and control mice, by histologic assessment and VDIPEN staining.

Results

On day 14 following induction of OA, MMP‐mediated neoepitopes were detected in cartilage from mice with mild experimental OA (mean ± SD positively stained surface area 20 ± 3.2%). Remarkably, by depleting synovial macrophages prior to induction of OA, the generation of MMP‐induced neoepitopes was largely prevented (mean ± SD positively stained surface area 5 ± 1%; P< 0.001), indicating an important role for synovial macrophages in the occurrence of MMP‐mediated cartilage damage. We observed a strong decrease in MMP‐3 and MMP‐9 expression in synovial but not cartilage tissue in macrophage‐depleted joints. Among 2‐year‐old mice, spontaneous OA–like changes in the lining layer were significantly decreased in MMP‐3–knockout mice compared with control mice. Even more striking was the 67% reduction in the occurrence of severe cartilage damage in MMP‐3–knockout mice. In addition, MMP‐mediated VDIPEN expression was significantly decreased, indicating reduced MMP‐mediated cartilage breakdown.

Conclusion

The results of this study prove that MMP‐3 is involved in the generation of severe cartilage damage in murine OA. Synovial macrophages are crucial in early MMP activity and appear to mediate MMP production in synovium rather than cartilage.
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Objective

To investigate the mechanism of the inhibitory action of hyaluronan (HA) on interleukin‐1β (IL‐1β)‐stimulated production of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) in human articular cartilage.

Methods

IL‐1β was added to normal and osteoarthritic (OA) human articular cartilage in explant culture to stimulate MMP production. Articular cartilage was incubated or preincubated with a clinically used form of 800‐kd HA to assess its effect on IL‐1β‐induced MMPs. Levels of secreted MMPs 1, 3, and 13 in conditioned media were detected by immunoblotting; intracellular MMP synthesis in chondrocytes was evaluated by immunofluorescence microscopy. Penetration of HA into cartilage tissue and its binding to CD44 were analyzed by fluorescence microscopy using fluoresceinated HA. Blocking experiments with anti‐CD44 antibody were performed to investigate the mechanism of action of HA.

Results

Treatment and pretreatment with 800‐kd HA at 1 mg/ml resulted in significant suppression of IL‐1β‐stimulated production of MMPs 1, 3, and 13 in normal and OA cartilage explant culture. Fluorescence histocytochemistry revealed that HA penetrated cartilage tissue and localized in the pericellular matrix around chondrocytes. HA‐binding blocking experiments using anti‐CD44 antibody demonstrated that the association of HA with chondrocytes was mediated by CD44. Preincubation with anti‐CD44 antibody, which suppressed IL‐1β‐stimulated MMPs, reversed the inhibitory effect of HA on MMP production that was induced by IL‐1β in normal and OA cartilage.

Conclusion

This study demonstrates that HA effectively inhibits IL‐1β‐stimulated production of MMP‐1, MMP‐3, and MMP‐13, which supports the clinical use of HA in the treatment of OA. The action of HA on IL‐1β may involve direct interaction between HA and CD44 on chondrocytes.
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Objective

Fibroblast growth factor (FGF) family members are involved in the regulation of articular cartilage homeostasis. The aim of this study was to investigate the function of FGF receptor 1 (FGFR‐1) in the development of osteoarthritis (OA) and its underlying mechanisms.

Methods

FGFR‐1 was deleted from the articular chondrocytes of adult mice in a cartilage‐specific and tamoxifen‐inducible manner. Two OA models (aging‐associated spontaneous OA, and destabilization‐induced OA), as well as an antigen‐induced arthritis (AIA) model, were established and tested in Fgfr1‐deficient and wild‐type (WT) mice. Alterations in cartilage structure and the loss of proteoglycan were assessed in the knee joints of mice of either genotype, using these 3 arthritis models. Primary chondrocytes were isolated and the expression of key regulatory molecules was assessed quantitatively. In addition, the effect of an FGFR‐1 inhibitor on human articular chondrocytes was examined.

Results

The gross morphologic features of Fgfr1‐deficient mice were comparable with those of WT mice at both the postnatal and adult stages. The articular cartilage of 12‐month‐old Fgfr1‐deficient mice displayed greater aggrecan staining compared to 12‐month‐old WT mice. Fgfr1 deficiency conferred resistance to the proteoglycan loss induced by AIA and attenuated the development of cartilage destruction after surgically induced destabilization of the knee joint. The chondroprotective effect of FGFR‐1 inhibition was largely associated with decreased expression of matrix metalloproteinase 13 (MMP‐13) and up‐regulation of FGFR‐3 in mouse and human articular chondrocytes.

Conclusion

Disruption of FGFR‐1 in adult mouse articular chondrocytes inhibits the progression of cartilage degeneration. Down‐regulation of MMP‐13 expression and up‐regulation of FGFR‐3 levels may contribute to the phenotypic changes observed in Fgfr1‐deficient mice.
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Objective

We have discovered that a combination of fibroblast growth factor 2 and transforming growth factor β1 induce profound morphologic changes in immature articular cartilage. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that these changes represent accelerated postnatal maturation.

Methods

Histochemical and biochemical assays were used to confirm the nature of the morphologic changes that accompany growth factor stimulation of immature bovine articular cartilage explants in serum‐free culture medium. Growth factor–induced apoptosis, cellular proliferation, and changes in the collagen network were also quantitatively analyzed.

Results

Growth factor stimulation resulted in rapid resorption from the basal aspect of immature cartilage explants that was simultaneously opposed by cellular proliferation from the apical aspect driven from a pool of chondroprogenitor cells we have previously described. Maturation‐dependent changes in tissue stiffness, collagen crosslinking, and collagen fibril architecture as well as differentiation of the extracellular matrix into distinct pericellular, territorial, and interterritorial domains were all present in growth factor–stimulated cartilage samples and absent in control samples.

Conclusion

Our data demonstrate that it is possible to significantly enhance the maturation of cartilage tissue using specific growth factor stimulation. This may have applications in transplantation therapy or in the treatment of diseased cartilage, through phenotype modulation of osteoarthritic chondrocytes in order to stimulate growth and maturation of cartilage repair tissue.
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13.

Objective

To evaluate the in vivo therapeutic effect of pioglitazone, a peroxisome proliferator–activated receptor γ (PPARγ) agonist, on the development of lesions in a guinea pig model of osteoarthritis (OA), and to determine the influence of pioglitazone on the synthesis of matrix metalloproteinase 13 (MMP‐13) and interleukin‐1β (IL‐1β) in articular cartilage.

Methods

The OA model was created by partial medial meniscectomy of the right knee joint. The guinea pigs were divided into 4 treatment groups: unoperated animals that received no treatment (normal), operated animals (OA guinea pigs) that received placebo, OA guinea pigs that received oral pioglitazone at 2 mg/kg/day, and OA guinea pigs that received oral pioglitazone at 20 mg/kg/day. The animals began receiving medication 1 day after surgery and were killed 4 weeks later. Macroscopic and histologic analyses were performed on the cartilage. The levels of MMP‐13 and IL‐1β in OA cartilage chondrocytes were evaluated by immunohistochemistry.

Results

OA guinea pigs treated with the highest dosages of pioglitazone showed a significant decrease, compared with the OA placebo group, in the surface area (size) and grade (depth) of cartilage macroscopic lesions on the tibial plateaus. The histologic severity of cartilage lesions was also reduced. A significantly higher percentage of chondrocytes in the middle and deep layers stained positive for MMP‐13 and IL‐1β in cartilage from placebo‐treated OA guinea pigs compared with normal controls. Guinea pigs treated with the highest dosage of pioglitazone demonstrated a significant reduction in the levels of both MMP‐13 and IL‐1β in OA cartilage.

Conclusion

This is the first in vivo study demonstrating that a PPARγ agonist, pioglitazone, could reduce the severity of experimental OA. This effect was associated with a reduction in the levels of MMP‐13 and IL‐1β, which are known to play an important role in the pathophysiology of OA lesions.
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14.

Objective

To understand changes in gene expression levels that occur during osteoarthritic (OA) cartilage degeneration, using complementary DNA (cDNA)–array technology.

Methods

Nine normal, 6 early degenerated, and 6 late‐stage OA cartilage samples of human knee joints were analyzed using the Human Cancer 1.2 cDNA array and TaqMan analysis.

Results

In addition to a large variability of expression levels between different patients, significant expression patterns were detectable for many genes. Cartilage types II and VI collagen were strongly expressed in late‐stage specimens, reflecting the high matrix‐remodeling activity of advanced OA cartilage. The increase in fibronectin expression in early degeneration suggests that fibronectin is a crucial regulator of matrix turnover activity of chondrocytes during early disease development. Of the matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), MMP‐3 appeared to be strongly expressed in normal and early degenerative cartilage and down‐regulated in the late stages of disease. This indicates that other degradation pathways might be more important in late stages of cartilage degeneration, involving other enzymes, such as MMP‐2 and MMP‐11, both of which were up‐regulated in late‐stage disease. MMP‐11 was up‐regulated in OA chondrocytes and, interestingly, also in the early‐stage samples. Neither MMP‐1 nor MMP‐8 was detectable, and MMP‐13 and MMP‐2 were significantly detectable only in late‐stage specimens, suggesting that early stages are characterized more by degradation of other matrix components, such as aggrecan and other noncollagenous molecules, than by degradation of type II collagen fibers.

Conclusion

This investigation allowed us to identify gene expression profiles of the disease process and to get new insights into disease mechanisms, for example, to develop a picture of matrix proteinases that are differentially involved in different phases of the disease process.
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Objective

Interleukin‐1β (IL‐1β) and tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα) stimulate chondrocyte matrix catabolic responses, thereby compromising cartilage homeostasis in osteoarthritis (OA). AMP‐activated protein kinase (AMPK), which regulates energy homeostasis and cellular metabolism, also exerts antiinflammatory effects in multiple tissues. This study was undertaken to test the hypothesis that AMPK activity limits chondrocyte matrix catabolic responses to IL‐1β and TNFα.

Methods

Expression of AMPK subunits was examined, and AMPKα activity was ascertained by the phosphorylation status of AMPKα Thr172 in human knee articular chondrocytes and cartilage by Western blotting and immunohistochemistry, respectively. Procatabolic responses to IL‐1β and TNFα, such as release of glycosaminoglycan, nitric oxide, and matrix metalloproteinases 3 and 13 were determined by dimethylmethylene blue assay, Griess reaction, and Western blotting, respectively, in cartilage explants and chondrocytes with and without knockdown of AMPKα by small interfering RNA.

Results

Normal human knee articular chondrocytes expressed AMPKα1, α2, β1, β2, and γ1 subunits. AMPK activity was constitutively present in normal articular chondrocytes and cartilage, but decreased in OA articular chondrocytes and cartilage and in normal chondrocytes treated with IL‐1β and TNFα. Knockdown of AMPKα resulted in enhanced catabolic responses to IL‐1β and TNFα in chondrocytes. Moreover, AMPK activators suppressed cartilage/chondrocyte procatabolic responses to IL‐1β and TNFα and the capacity of TNFα and CXCL8 (IL‐8) to induce type X collagen expression.

Conclusion

Our findings indicate that AMPK activity is reduced in OA cartilage and in chondrocytes following treatment with IL‐1β or TNFα. AMPK activators attenuate dephosphorylation of AMPKα and procatabolic responses in chondrocytes induced by these cytokines. These observations suggest that maintenance of AMPK activity supports cartilage homeostasis by protecting cartilage matrix from inflammation‐induced degradation.
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17.

Objective

Bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) and transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) are potent anabolic factors in adult articular chondrocytes. In this study, we investigated whether intracellular inhibitors of BMP and TGFβ signaling, inhibitory Smad6 (I‐Smad6) and I‐Smad7, are expressed in articular chondrocytes in normal and osteoarthritic (OA) cartilage, and whether their expression shows a correlation with the anabolic activity of OA chondrocytes in vivo and after interleukin‐1β (IL‐1β) stimulation in vitro.

Methods

RNA isolated directly from normal and OA human knee cartilage as well as from cultured articular chondrocytes was analyzed by (quantitative) polymerase chain reaction technology. Immunolocalization of the I‐Smads was performed on tissue sections and compared with the anabolic cellular activity as documented by in situ hybridization experiments for aggrecan and type II collagen.

Results

Both Smad6 and Smad7 were expressed in all samples of normal and OA cartilage. Immunostaining (including confocal microscopy) confirmed the presence of Smad6 and Smad7 in the majority of normal and degenerated articular chondrocytes; localization was mostly cytoplasmic. No correlation between expression of the main anabolic genes and expression of the I‐Smads was found. In cultured articular chondrocytes, stimulation with IL‐1β showed up‐regulation of Smad7, whereas Smad6 was down‐regulated.

Conclusion

Both Smad6 and Smad7 are expressed in adult human articular chondrocytes. The primarily cytoplasmic localization suggests permanent activation of the I‐Smads in articular cartilage in vivo. No evidence was found that up‐regulation or down‐regulation of I‐Smads in OA cartilage correlates directly with the anabolic (or catabolic) activity of articular chondrocytes. The regulation in chondrocytes of Smad6 and Smad7 expression by IL‐1β suggests a potentially important role of IL‐1β signaling in chondrocytes, via indirect influencing of the BMP/TGFβ signaling cascade.
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18.

Objective

Superoxide dismutase 2 (SOD2) is down‐ regulated in osteoarthritis (OA). This study was undertaken to investigate the functional effects of this down‐regulation in the context of oxidative damage and mitochondrial dysfunction.

Methods

Lipid peroxidation in articular cartilage from OA patients and from lesion‐free control subjects with femoral neck fracture was assessed by measuring malondialdehyde levels using the thiobarbituric acid reactive substances assay. Long‐range polymerase chain reaction amplification and a mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) strand break assay were used to investigate the presence of somatic large‐scale mtDNA rearrangements in cartilage. Microscale oxygraphy was used to explore possible changes in mitochondrial respiratory activity between OA and control chondrocytes. RNA interference was used to determine the effects of SOD2 depletion on lipid peroxidation, mtDNA damage, and mitochondrial respiration.

Results

OA cartilage had higher levels of lipid peroxidation compared to control cartilage, and lipid peroxidation was similarly elevated in SOD2‐depleted chondrocytes. SOD2 depletion led to a significant increase in mtDNA strand breaks in chondrocytes, but there was no notable difference in the level of strand breaks between OA and control chondrocytes. Furthermore, only very low levels of somatic, large‐scale mtDNA rearrangements were identified in OA cartilage. OA chondrocytes showed less spare respiratory capacity (SRC) and higher proton leak compared to control chondrocytes. SOD2‐depleted chondrocytes also showed less SRC and higher proton leak.

Conclusion

This is the first study to analyze the effects of SOD2 depletion in human articular chondrocytes in terms of changes to oxidation and mitochondrial function. The findings indicate that SOD2 depletion in chondrocytes leads to oxidative damage and mitochondrial dysfunction, suggesting that SOD2 down‐regulation is a potential contributor to the pathogenesis of OA.
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