Abstract
Lubricin is a proteoglycan that is a boundary lubricant in synovial joints and both a surface and collagen inter-fascicular lubricant in ligaments. The purpose of this study was to characterise the mRNA levels for lubricin in the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), posterior cruciate ligament (PCL), medial collateral ligament (MCL), and lateral collateral ligament (LCL) in aging and surgically-induced menopausal rabbits. We hypothesised that lubricin mRNA levels would be increased in ligaments from aging and menopausal rabbits compared with ligaments from normal rabbits.
All four knee ligaments (ACL, PCL, MCL, LCL) were isolated from normal (1-year-old rabbits, n=8), aging (3-year-old rabbits, n=6), and menopausal (1-year-old rabbits fourteen weeks after surgical ovariohysterectomy, n=8) female New Zealand White rabbits. RT-qPCR was used to evaluate the mRNA levels for lubricin normalised to the housekeeping gene 18S. After removing outliers, data for normal, aging, and menopausal rabbits for each knee ligament (ACL, PCL, MCL, LCL) were compared using ANOVA with linear contrasts or Kruskal-Wallis test with Conover post-hoc analysis.
For ACLs, the mRNA levels for lubricin were increased in menopausal and aging rabbits compared with normal rabbits (p<0.056). For PCLs, trends for increased lubricin mRNA levels were found when comparing menopausal and aging rabbits with normal rabbits (p<0.092). For MCLs, the mRNA levels for lubricin were increased in menopausal and aging rabbits compared with normal rabbits (p<0.050). For LCLs, no differences in lubricin mRNA levels were detected comparing the three groups. For all four knee ligaments (ACL, PCL, MCL, LCL), no differences in lubricin mRNA levels were detected comparing the ligaments from menopausal rabbits with those from aging rabbits.
Lubricin plays a role in collagen fascicle lubrication in ligaments (1,2). Increased lubricin gene expression was associated with mechanical changes (including decreased modulus and increased failure strain) in the aging rabbit MCL (3). Detection of similar molecular changes in the ACL, and possibly the PCL, may indicate that their mechanical properties may also change as a result of increased lubricin gene expression, thereby potentially pre-disposing these ligaments to damage accumulation. Compared to aging ligaments, aging tendons exhibited decreased lubricin gene and protein expression, and increased stiffness (4). Although opposite changes than aging ligaments, these findings support the relationship between lubricin and modulus/stiffness. The similarities between ligaments in the aging and menopausal groups may suggest that surgically-induced menopause results in a form of accelerated aging in the rabbit ACL, MCL and possibly PCL.