Advertisement for orthosearch.org.uk
Results 1 - 20 of 39
Results per page:
Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 3, Issue 3 | Pages 51 - 59
1 Mar 2014
Kim HJ Braun HJ Dragoo JL

Background. Resveratrol is a polyphenolic compound commonly found in the skins of red grapes. Sirtuin 1 (SIRT1) is a human gene that is activated by resveratrol and has been shown to promote longevity and boost mitochondrial metabolism. We examined the effect of resveratrol on normal and osteoarthritic (OA) human chondrocytes. Methods. Normal and OA chondrocytes were incubated with various concentrations of resveratrol (1 µM, 10 µM, 25 µM and 50 µM) and cultured for 24, 48 or 72 hours or for six weeks. Cell proliferation, gene expression, and senescence were evaluated. Results. SIRT1 was significantly upregulated in normal chondrocytes with resveratrol concentrations of 25 µM and 50 µM on both two- (2D) (both p = 0.001) and three-dimensional (3D) cultures (p = 0.008 and 0.001, respectively). It was significantly upregulated in OA chondrocytes treated with 10 µM, 25 µM and 50 µM resveratrol on 2D cultures (p = 0.036, 0.002 and 0.001, respectively) and at 50 µM concentration on 3D cultures (p = 0.001). At 72 hours, the expression of collagen (COL)-10, aggrecan (AGG), and runt-related transcription factor 2 (RUNX2) was significantly greater in both 25 µM (p = 0.011, 0.006 and 0.015, respectively) and 50 µM (p = 0.019, 0.004 and 0.002, respectively) resveratrol-treated normal chondrocyte cultures. In OA chondrocytes, expression of COL10 and RUNX2 was significantly greater in 25 µM (p = 0.004 and 0.024) and 50 µM (p = 0.004 and 0.019) cultures at 72 hours on 3D cultures. Conclusions. At concentrations of 25 µM and/or 50 µM, resveratrol treatment significantly upregulates SIRT1 gene expression in normal and osteoarthritic chondrocytes. Resveratrol induces chondrocytes into a hypertrophic state through upregulation of COL1, COL10, and RUNX2. Cite this article: Bone Joint Res 2014;3:51–9


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 14 - 14
1 Nov 2018
Jahr H
Full Access

Onset and progression of osteoarthritis (OA) is affected by a plethora of factors, including joint injury, obesity, aging, and heredity. This multi-factorial etiology obstructs our understanding of driving molecular mechanisms, which likely comprise an interplay between systemic and local factors. Next to biomechanical factors and cytokines, the course of OA appears to be altered by microenvironmental oxidative stress: cumulative evidence now suggests a prominent participation of cell signalling mediated by nuclear factor (erythroid-derived 2)-like 2 (Nrf2), a master regulator of cellular protective processes, in this process. Nrf2 activation through phosphorylation of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) regulates Nrf2 target genes, like hemeoxygenase-1 (HO-1), superoxide dismutase 2 (SOD2), or NAD(P)H Quinone Dehydrogenase 1 (NQO1) in OA chondrocytes. Maintaining high levels of HO-1 appears to be beneficial against OA development. Experimental manipulation of putative antioxidant response element (ARE) binding sites alters the in vitro expression of key transcription factors of chondrocyte markers in promoter-reporter assays. Potentially, Nrf2 is involved in autophagy, intermediary metabolism and unfolded protein response. RNAi-mediated depletion of Nrf2 further significantly abrogated anti-inflammatory and chondroprotective effects and epigenetics link transcriptional pathways of ‘N-factors’, Nrf2 and NFATs, to micro-RNA signalling. Current findings thus reveal novel mechanisms regulating extracellular matrix synthesis by chondrocytes. A further understanding of these pathways and their regulation will lead to important novel targets to slow OA progression


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 47 - 47
17 Nov 2023
Algarni M Amin A Hall A
Full Access

Abstract

Objectives

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a painful and debilitating disorder of diarthroidal joints. Progressive degeneration of the cartilage extracellular matrix (ECM) together with abnormal chondrocyte characteristics occur leading to a switch to a fibroblast-like phenotype and production of mechanically-weak cartilage. Early changes to chondrocytes within human cartilage have been observed including chondrocyte swelling[1] together with the development of thin cytoplasmic processes which increase in number and length with degeneration[2]. Changes to chondrocyte phenotype in degenerate cartilage are associated with F-actin redistribution and stress fibres (SF) formation, leading to morphologically-dedifferentiated (fibroblast-like) chondrocytes[3,4]. It is unclear if these processes are a consequence of ‘passive’ cell swelling into a defective ECM or an ‘active’ event driven by changes in cell metabolism resulting in alterations to cell shape. To address this, we have quantified and compared the distribution and levels of F-actin, a key cytoskeletal protein involved in the formation of cytoplasmic processes, within in situ chondrocytes in non-degenerate and mildly degenerate human cartilage.

Methods

Human femoral head cartilage was obtained from 21 patients [15 females, 6 males, average age 69.6yrs, (range 47–90yrs)] following femoral neck fracture, with Ethical Approval and patient's permission. Cartilage explants were removed from areas graded non-degenerate grade 0 (G0) or mildly degenerate grade 1 (G1) and cultured for up to 3wks in Dulbecco's Modified Eagle's Medium (DMEM) +/− 25% human serum (HS). In situ chondrocytes were stained with CMFDA (5-chloromethylfluoresceindiacetate, Cell-Tracker Green®) and phalloidin (F-actin labelling) and imaged by confocal microscopy and analysed quantitatively using ImageJ and Imaris® software.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 127 - 127
11 Apr 2023
Nau T Cutts S Naidoo N
Full Access

There is an evolving body of evidence that demonstrates the role of epigenetic mechanisms, such as DNA-methylation in the pathogenesis of OA. This systematic review aims to summarize the current evidence of DNA methylation and its influence on the pathogenesis of OA. A pre-defined protocol in alignment with the PRISMA guidelines was employed to systematically review eight bibliographic databases, to identify associations between DNA-methylation of articular chondrocytes and osteoarthritis. A search of Medline (Ovid), Embase, Web-of-Science, Scopus, PubMed, Cinahl (EBSCOhost), Cochrane Central and Google Scholar was performed between 1st January 2015 to 31st January 2021. Data extraction was performed by two independent reviewers. During the observation period, we identified 15 gene specific studies and 24 genome wide methylation analyses. The gene specific studies mostly focused on the expression of pro-inflammatory markers, such as IL8 and MMP13 which are overexpressed in OA chondrocytes. DNA hypomethylation in the promoter region resulted in overexpression, whereas hypermethylation was seen in non-OA chondrocytes. Others reported on the association between OA risk genes and the DNA methylation pattern close to RUNX2, which is an important OA signal. The genome wide methylation studies reported mostly on differentially methylated regions comparing OA chondrocytes and non-OA chondrocytes. Clustering of the regions identified genes that are involved in skeletal morphogenesis and development. Differentially methylated regions were seen in hip OA and knee OA chondrocytes, and even within different regions of an OA affected knee joint, differentially methylated regions were identified depending on the disease stage. This systematic review demonstrates the growing evidence of epigenetic mechanisms, such as DNA methylation, in the pathogenesis of OA. In recent years, there has been a focus on the interplay between OA risk genes and DNA methylation changes which revealed a reactivation of genes responsible for endochondral ossification during development. These are important findings and may help to identify eventual future therapeutic targets. However, the current body of literature is mostly showing the differences in DNA methylation of OA chondrocytes and non-OA chondrocytes, but a true longitudinal analysis demonstrating the DNA methylation changes actually happening is still not available


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 44 - 44
2 Jan 2024
Ciftci E Grad S Alini M Li Z
Full Access

Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most prevalent degenerative joint disease that is a leading cause of disability worldwide. Existing therapies of OA only address the symptoms. Liraglutide is a well-known anti-diabetic medication that is used to treat type 2 diabetes and obesity. In inflammatory and post-traumatic OA animal models, liraglutide has demonstrated anti-inflammatory, pain-relieving, and cartilage-regenerating effects1 . The objective of this study is to investigate liraglutide's ability to reduce inflammation and promote anabolism in human OA chondrocytes in vitro. Pellets formed with human OA chondrocytes were cultured with a chondrogenic medium for one week to form cartilage tissue. Afterward, pellets were cultured for another 2 weeks with a chondropermissive medium. The OA group was treated with IL-1β to mimic an inflammatory OA condition. The drug group was treated with 0.5 or 10 µM liraglutide. On days 0, 1, and 14, pellets were collected. Conditioned medium was collected over the 2 weeks culture period. The gene and protein expression levels of regenerative and inflammatory biomarkers were evaluated and histological analyzes were performed. Results showed that the nitric oxide release of the OA + 0.5 µM liraglutide and OA + 10 µM liraglutide groups were lower than the OA group. The DNA content of the OA + 0.5 µM liraglutide and OA + 10 µM liraglutide groups were higher than the OA group on day 14. The RT-qPCR results showed that the anabolism (ACAN, COMP, and COL2) markers were higher expressed in the OA + 0.5 µM liraglutide and OA + 10 µM liraglutide groups when compared with the OA group. The inflammation (CCL-2 and IL-8) markers and catabolism markers (MMP-1, MMP-3, ADAMTS4, and ADAMTS5) had lower expression levels in the OA + liraglutide groups compared to the OA group. The histomorphometric analysis (Figure 1) supported the RT-qPCR results. The results indicate that liraglutide has anabolic and anti-inflammatory effects on human OA chondrocyte pellets. Acknowledgments: This project has received funding from the Eurostars-2 joint program with co-funding from the European Union Horizon 2020 research and innovation program. The funding agencies supporting this work are (in alphabetical order of participating countries): France: BPI France; Germany: Project Management Agency (DLR), which acts on behalf of the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF); The Netherlands: Netherlands Enterprise Agency (RVO); Switzerland: Innosuisse (the Swiss Innovation Agency). For any figures and tables, please contact the authors directly


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 89 - 89
1 Mar 2021
Govaerts A Graceffa V Lories R Jonkers I
Full Access

Mechanical loading regulates the metabolism of chondrocytes in cartilage1. Nowadays, studies exploring the in vitro response of cartilage towards loading often rely on bioreactor experiments applying only compressive loading. This is likely not sufficiently representative for the complex multi-directional loading profile in vivo (i.e. where typical compressive and shear loading are both present). The impact of multi-axial loading is specifically relevant in the context of the onset of osteoarthritis (OA) due to joint destabilization. Here, alterations in the 3D loading profile, and in particular increased shear forces, are suggested to initiate catabolic molecular responses leading to cartilage degeneration3. However, in vitro/ex vivo data confirming this hypothesis are currently lacking. Therefore, we aim to investigate how increased shear loading affects the metabolism and ECM deposition of a healthy chondrogenic cell line and if this response is different in osteoarthritic primary chondrocytes. A murine chondrogenic precursor cell line (ATDC5) and primary human osteoarthritic articular chondrocytes (hOACs) were encapsulated in 2.2% alginate disks and cultured in DMEM medium for three days. Hydrogels seeded with the different cell groups were loaded in the TA ElectroForce BioDynamic Bioreactor and subjected to following loading conditions: (a) 10% compression at 1Hz for 1h, (b) 10% compression and 10° shear loading at 1Hz for 1h. Unloaded constructs were used as control. After loading, hydrogel constructs were stabilized in culture medium for 2 hours, to facilitate adequate gene expression responses, before being dissolved and snap frozen. RNA was isolated and gene expression levels specific for anabolic pathways, characterized by extracellular matrix (ECM) genes (Col2a1, Aggrecan and Perlecan), catabolic processes (MMP-3 and MMP-13) and chondrogenic transcription factor (Sox9) were evaluated using RT-qPCR. The TA ElectroForce BioDynamic Bioreactor was successfully set-up to mimic cartilage loading. In ATDC5 cells, compression elicits an increase in all measured ECM genes (Col2a1, Aggrecan and Perlecan) compared to unloaded controls, suggesting an anabolic response. This upregulation is decreased when adding additional shear strain. In contrast to ATDC5 cells, the anabolic response of proteoglycans Aggrecan and Perlecan to compressive loading was lower in osteoarthritic chondrocytes, and Col2a1 expression appeared decreased. Adding shear strain reversed this effect on Col2a1 expression. Multi-directional loading increased transcription factor Sox9 expression compared to compression in both ATDC5 and OA chondrocytes. In OA chondrocytes, both loading regimens increased MMP-3 and MMP-13 expression. Shear loading reduces the anabolic effect of compressive loading in both cell types. OA cells presented more catabolic response to mechanical loading compared to precursors, given the increase in catabolic enzymes MMP-3 and MMP-13


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 149 - 149
1 Nov 2021
Smeriglio P Indelli PF Bhutani N
Full Access

Introduction and Objective. Osteoarthristis (OA) has been associated with many genes and yet the genetic basis for this disease has never formally been established. Recent realization that epigenetic changes could be the underlying pathological mechanisms has helped to explain many complex multifactorial diseases with no clear genetic cause. We therefore asked whether epigenetics could also play a role in OA. We have previously shown that the DNA epigenetic modification, specifically the hydroxymethylation on cytosine (5hmC), undergoes a fivefold increase on OA-associated genes which are activated at OA onset. In this study, we further uncovered a set of 5hmC-mediated gene targets and their mechanistic link to OA progression. Materials and Methods. We surgically induced OA on 4 to 6 months old Tet1−/− mice (Tet1tm1.1Jae, the Jackson laboratory) and wild-type littermates by performing destabilization of the medial meniscus (DMM) surgery. Joints were collected for histological assessment through blinded grading with the OARSI scoring system. Human articular chondrocytes were harvested from OA cartilage samples obtained during total knee arthroplasty or from grossly normal cartilage pieces obtained during notchplasty or debridement from patients undergoing anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction with no history of OA symptoms, under approved Human subjects Institutional Review Board protocols. Bioinformatic analyses of RNA-sequencing and CCGG sequencing (reduced representation 5hmC profiling) were performed to identify TET1 target genes associated with OA progression. Several measurements were used to assess the effect of TET1 ablation on the phenotype of mouse cartilage tissue and human chondrocytes including, histological evaluation, and quantitative bone assessment by micro-CT imaging and multiplex cytokine analyses in the serum of mice in vivo (mouse 39-plex assay) and in the supernatant of human chondrocyte cultures (human 62-plex assay). Results. We used a mouse model with surgically induced OA and found that OA onset was accompanied by a gain of ∼40,000 differentially hydroxymethylated sites prior the notable histological onset of the disease. We additionally revealed that these changes are mediated by the ten-eleven-translocation enzyme 1 (TET1), since Tet1−/− mice lost 98% of 5hmC sites upon OA induction. Remarkably, Tet1−/− mice were protected from OA development including degeneration of the cartilage surface and osteophyte formation. Silencing of TET1 expression in human OA chondrocytes reduced the expression in a set of genes, which may represent the pathological gene targets that exacerbate OA including MMP3 and MMP13 and several inflammatory cytokines. Therefore, our study reveals the unexpected beneficial role of TET1 inhibition in blocking OA progression. In fact, intra-articular injections of a dioxygenases’ inhibitor, 2 hydroxyglutarate, on mice after surgical induction of OA stalled disease progression. Furthermore, treatment of human OA chondrocytes with the same inhibitor also phenocopied TET1 loss, implicating a therapeutic potential of TET inhibition in OA patients. Conclusions. Collectively, our study not only demonstrate the role of TET1 in OA; the 5hmC-mediated gene targets acting on multiple OA pathways were identified and can be modulated as therapeutic intervention to treat OA


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 16 - 16
14 Nov 2024
Mei J Pasoldt A Matalova E Graessel S
Full Access

Introduction. Osteoarthritis (OA) is a prevalent joint disorder characterized by cartilage degeneration, inflammation, and pain. Current treatments provide only symptomatic relief, necessitating novel molecular targets. The caspase family, known for its roles in apoptosis and inflammation regulation, may additionally influence crucial processes for cartilage homeostasis such as differentiation and proliferation. However, the specific roles of individual caspases in OA pathogenesis remain unclear. This study aims to investigate the involvement of the caspase family in OA and as potential targets for therapy, with a focus on caspase-1 and -8. Method. Chondrocytes from both healthy and OA donors were cultured in 2D and 3D culture models and stimulated with TNF-α or IL-1β. The expression and activation of caspase-1 and -8 was assessed using RT-PCR, ELISA. Transcriptome analysis of OA and healthy cartilage samples, along with Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis were conducted to explore the involvement of caspase family in OA and to assess its potential as therapeutic targets. Result. Higher expression levels of caspase-1, -8 were observed in OA cartilage compared to healthy cartilage. TNF-α stimulation increased their expression in both healthy and OA chondrocytes, while IL-1β had limited impact. Caspase-8 expression was causally associated with knee OA in MR analysis, suggesting a potential therapeutic target. The caspase-1 inhibitor VX-765 mildly reduced chondrocyte viability, with no significant effect in the presence of TNF-α. While the caspase-8 inhibitor Z-IETD-FMK exhibited slight enhancements in cell viability, these improvements were not statistically significant. Nevertheless, its effectiveness significantly increased in the presence of TNF-α. Conclusion. This study highlights the involvement of caspase-1 and caspase-8 in OA pathology, with caspase-8 emerging as a potential therapeutic target for knee OA treatment. Further investigation into the roles of caspase-1 and -8 in OA pathophysiology, including the efficacy and potential side effects of their corresponding inhibitors, is warranted. Acknowledgements. Funding Inter-Action/Inter-Excellence project (BTHA-JC-2022-36/LUABA22019)


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 5 - 5
2 Jan 2024
Karaçoban L Gizer M Fidan BB Kaplan O Çelebier M Korkusuz P Turhan E Korkusuz F
Full Access

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a disabling disease depriving the quality of life of patients. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are recently used to modify the inflammatory and degenerative cascade of the disease. Source of MSCs could change the progression and symptoms of OA due to their different metabolomic activities. We asked whether MSCs derived from the infrapatellar fat (IPF), synovium (Sy) and subcutaneous (SC) tissues will decrease inflammatory and degenerative markers of normal and OA chondrocytes and improve regeneration in culture. Tissues were obtained from three male patients undergoing arthroscopic knee surgery due to sports injuries after ethical board approval. TNFa concentration decreased in all MSC groups (Sy=156,6±79, SC=42,1±6 and IPF=35,5±3 pg/ml; p=0,036) on day 14 in culture. On day seven (Sy=87,4±43,7, SC=23±8,9 and IPF=14,7±3,3 pg/ml, p=0,043) and 14 (Sy=29,1±11,2, SC=28,3±18,5 and IPF=20,3±16,2 pg/ml, p=0,043), MMP3 concentration decreased in all groups. COMP concentration changes however were not significant. Plot scores of tissues for PC2-13,4% were significantly different. Based on the results of liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) metabolomics coupled with recent data processing strategies, clinically relevant seven metabolites (L-fructose, a-tocotrienol, coproporphyrin, nicotinamide, bilirubin, tauro-deoxycholic acid and galactose-sphingosine) were found statistically different (p<0.05 and fold change>1.5) ratios in tissue samples. Focusing on these metabolites as potential therapeutics could enhance MSC therapies. Acknowledgment: Hacettepe University, Scientific Research Projects Coordination Unit (#THD-2020-18692) and Turkish Society of Orthopedics and Traumatology (#TOTBID-89) funded this project. Feza Korkusuz MD is a member of the Turkish Academy of Sciences (TÜBA)


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 124 - 124
2 Jan 2024
Pascuet-Fontanet A Segarra-Queralt M Noailly J
Full Access

Osteoarthritis (OA) leads to articular cartilage degradation, following complex dysregulation of chondrocyte's metabolism towards a catabolic state. Mechanical and biochemical signals are involved and need to be considered to understand the condition. Regulatory network-based models (RNM) successfully simulated the biological activity of the chondrocyte and the transduction of mechanical signals at the molecular and cell levels. However, the knowledge gap between single-cell regulation and intercellular communication in tissue volumes hinders the interpretability of such models at larger scales. Accordingly, a novel tissue-level biochemical model is proposed. We hypothesise that it is possible to simulate interacting network effects through the transport of diluted species in a finite-element model, to grasp relevant dynamics of cell and tissue regulation in OA. Chondrocyte RNM equations were translated into a reaction term of 18 multi-species diffusion model (e.g., 3 anti-inflammatory and 8 pro-inflammatory interleukins, 3 pro-anabolic and 1 pro-catabolic growth factors, 2 nociceptive factors and 2 pro-inflammatory cytokines). Elements with RNM reaction terms represented the chondrocytes and were distributed randomly through the model, according to known cellular density in the knee cartilage, and could both react to and produce diffusive entities through the pericellular matrix, associated with reduced diffusion coefficients. The model was constructed over a 2D square of 0.47 mm sides considered to be in the middle of the cartilage, so boundary conditions were settled as periodic. Different simulations were initialised with initial concentrations of either healthy or pro-OA mediators. Preliminary results showed that, independently of the initial conditions, the chondrocytes successfully evolved into anabolic states, in absence of sustained pro-catabolic external stimulations, in contrast to single-cell RNM [2]. Our intercellular model suggests that paracrine communication may increase robustness towards cartilage maintenance, and future tests shall reveal new OA dynamics. Acknowledgements: Funding was provided by the European Commission (ERC-2021-CoG-O-Health-101044828)


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 18 - 18
1 Nov 2018
Vadalà G
Full Access

Irisin is a hormone-like myokine released from skeletal muscle during exercise. It has also been reported that irisin levels in serum and synovial fluid of knee osteoarthritis (OA) patients were negatively correlated with OA severity. We hypothesized that irisin might play a role in the cartilage homeostasis mediated by physical activity. Therefore, this study aims to explore the cross talk between skeletal muscle and cartilage tissues in human with OA mediated by the myokine irisin. Human articular OA chondrocytes were isolated, expanded and cultured in micro-mass 3-D culture system. Pellets were cultured with or without r-Irisin, and then activated by protein inhibitors of p38-MAPK signalling pathway. After one week the amount of GAG content was evaluated. Quantitative gene expression of Coll-X and Coll-II was performed. WB was utilized to detect expressions of p38-MAPK signalling pathway and Coll-X and Coll-II. In the current study, chondrocytes cultured in r-Irisin showed a significant higher GAG/DNA content compared to control (p<0.05). Moreover, r-Irisin promoted a significant increase of the expression collagen type II and decrease of collagen type X in (p<0.05). This OA chondrocytes recovery was abrogated by the p38 MAPK and ERK signalling pathways. Our observation suggests that Irisin targets chondrocytes promoting GAG content, increasing Collagen Type II and decreasing Collagen type X gene expressions. The observed OA chondrocyte recovery mediated by irisin is obtained through the inactivation of p38/ERK MAP kinase signalling cascades in vitro. This is the first study that demonstrates a cross-talk between muscle and cartilage mediated by irisin


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 83 - 83
2 Jan 2024
Segarra-Queralt M Galofré M Tio L Monfort J Monllau J Piella G Noailly J
Full Access

Knee osteoarthritis (KOA) diagnosis is based on symptoms, assessed through questionnaires such as the WOMAC. However, the inconsistency of pain recording and the discrepancy between joint phenotype and symptoms highlight the need for objective biomarkers in KOA diagnosis. To this end, we study relationships among clinical and molecular data in a cohort of women (n=51) with Kellgren-Lawrence grade 2–3 KOA through Support Vector Machine (SVM) and a regulation network model (RNM). Clinical descriptors (i.e., pain catastrophism (CA); depression (DE); functionality (FU); joint pain (JP); rigidity (RI); sensitization (SE); synovitis (SY)) are used to classify patients. A Youden's test is performed for each classifier to determine optimal binarization thresholds for the descriptors. Thresholds are tested against patient stratification according to baseline WOMAC data from the Osteoarthritis Initiative, and the mean accuracy is 0.97. For our cohort, the data used as SVM inputs are KOA descriptors, synovial fluid (SL) proteomic measurements (n=25), and transcription factors (TF) activation obtained from RNM [2] stimulated with the SL measurements. The relative weights after classification reflect input importance. The performance of each classifier is evaluated through AUC-ROC analysis. The best classifier with clinical data is CA (AUC = 0.9), highly influenced by FU and SE, suggesting that kinesophobia is involved in pain perception. With SL input, leptin strongly influences every classifier, suggesting the importance of low-grade inflammation. When TF are used, the mean AUC is limited to 0.608, which can be related to the pleomorphic behaviour of osteoarthritic chondrocytes. Nevertheless, FU has an AUC of 0.7 with strong importance of FOXO downregulation. Though larger and longitudinal cohorts are needed, this unique combination of SVM and RNM shall help to map objectively KOA descriptors. Acknowledgements: Catalan & Spanish governments 2020FI_b00680; STRATO-PID2021126469ob-C21-2, European Commission (MSCA-TN-ETN-2020-Disc4All-955735, ERC-2021-CoG-O-Health-101044828). ICREA Academia


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 7 - 7
11 Apr 2023
Hart M Selig M Azizi S Walz K Lauer J Rolauffs B
Full Access

While cell morphology has been recognized as a fundamental regulator of cell behavior, few studies have measured the complex cell morphological changes of chondrocytes using quantitative cell morphometry descriptors in relation to inflammation and phenotypic outcome. Acute vs. persistent exposure to IL-1β and how IL-1β modulated dynamic changes in cell morphology in relation to the phenotype, donor and OA grade in healthy and osteoarthritis (OA) chondrocytes was investigated. A panel of quantitative cell morphometry descriptors was measured using an automated high-throughput method. Absolute quantification of gene expression was measured by ddPCR followed by correlation analyses. In OA chondrocytes, chronic IL-1β significantly decreased COL2A1, SOX9, and ACAN, increased IL-6 and IL-8 levels and caused chondrocytes to become less wide, smaller, longer, slimmer, less round and more circular, consistent with a de-differentiated phenotype. In healthy chondrocytes, 3 days after acute (72 h) IL-1β exposure, COL1A2 and IL-6 significantly increased but had minor effects on cell morphology. However, in healthy chondrocytes, persistent IL-1β led to more profound effects in all cell morphology descriptors and chondrocytes expressed significantly less COL2A1 and more IL-6 and IL-8 vs. controls and acutely-stimulated chondrocytes. In both OA and healthy chronically-stimulated chondrocytes, area, width and circularity were sensitive to the persistent presence of the IL-1β cytokine. Moreover, there were many significant and strong correlations among the measured parameters, with several indications of an IL-1β-mediated mechanism. Cell morphology combined with gene expression analysis could guide researchers interested in understanding inflammatory effects in the complex domain of cartilage/chondrocyte biology. Use of quantitative cell morphometry could complement classical approaches by providing numerical data on a large number of cells, thereby providing a biological fingerprint for describing chondrocyte phenotype, which could help to understand how changes in cell morphology lead to disease progression


Full Access

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have been studied for the treatment of Osteoarthritis (OA), a potential mechanism of MSC therapies has been attributed to paracrine activity, in which extracellular vesicles (EVs) may play a major role. It is suggested that MSCs from younger donor compete with adult MSC in their EV production capabilities. Therefore, MSCs generated from induced pluripotent mesenchymal stem cells (iMSC) appear to provide a promising source. In this study, MSCs and iMSC during long term-expansion using a serum free clinical grade condition, were characterized for surface expression pattern, proliferation and differentiation capacity, and senescence rate. Culture media were collected continuously during cell expansion, and EVs were isolated. Nanoparticle tracking analysis (NTA), transmission electron microscopy, western blots, and flow cytometry were used to identify EVs. We evaluated the biological effects of MSC and iMSC-derived EVs on human chondrocytes treated with IL-1α, to mimic the OA environment. In both cell types, from early to late passages, the amount of EVs detected by NTA increased significantly, EVs collected during cells expansion, retained tetraspanins (CD9, CD63 and CD81) expression. The anti-inflammatory activity of MSC-EVs was evaluated in vitro using OA chondrocytes, the expression of IL-6, IL-8 and COX-2 was significantly reduced after the treatment with hMSC-derived EVs isolated at early passage. The miRNA content of EVs was also investigated, we identify miRNA that are involved in specific biological function. At the same time, we defined the best culture conditions to maintain iMSC and define the best time window in which to isolate EVs with highest biological activity. In conclusion, a clinical grade serum-free medium was found to be suitable for the isolation and expansion of MSCs and iMSC with increased EVs production for therapeutic applications. Acknowledgments: This project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 874671


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 126 - 126
2 Jan 2024
Schmidt S Klampfleuthner F Diederichs S
Full Access

The signaling molecule prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), synthesized by cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2), is immunoregulatory and reported to be essential for skeletal stem cell function. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are widely used in osteoarthritis (OA) analgesia, but cohort studies suggested that long-term use may accelerate pathology. Interestingly, OA chondrocytes secrete high amounts of PGE2. Mesenchymal stromal cell (MSC) chondrogenesis is an in vitro OA model that phenocopies PGE2 secretion along with a hypertrophic OA-like cell morphology. Our aim was to investigate cause and effects of PGE2 secretion in MSC-based cartilage neogenesis and hypertrophy and identify molecular mechanisms responsible for adverse effects in OA analgesia. Human bone marrow-derived MSCs were cultured in chondrogenic medium with TGFβ (10ng/mL) and treated with PGE2 (1µM), celecoxib (COX-2 inhibitor; 0.5µM), AH23848/AH6809 (PGE2 receptor antagonists; 10µM), or DMSO as a control (n=3–4). Assessment criteria were proteoglycan deposition (histology), chondrocyte/hypertrophy marker expression (qPCR), and ALP activity. PGE2 secretion was measured (ELISA) after TGFβ withdrawal (from day 21, n=2) or WNT inhibition (2µM IWP-2 from day 14; n=3). Strong decrease in PGE2 secretion upon TGFβ deprivation or WNT inhibition identified both pathways as PGE2 drivers. Homogeneous proteoglycan deposition and COL2A1 expression analysis showed that MSC chondrogenesis was not compromised by any treatment. Importantly, hypertrophy markers (COL10A1, ALPL, SPP1, IBSP) were significantly reduced by PGE2 treatment, but increased by all inhibitors. Additionally, PGE2 significantly decreased ALP activity (2.9-fold), whereas the inhibitors caused a significant increase (1.3-fold, 1.7-fold, 1.8-fold). This identified PGE2 as an important inhibitor of chondrocyte hypertrophy. Although TGFβ and WNT are known pro-arthritic signaling pathways, they appear to induce a PGE2-mediated antihypertrophic effect that can counteract pathological cell changes in chondrocytes. Hampering this rescue mechanism via COX inhibition using NSAIDs thus risks acceleration of OA progression, indicating the need of OA analgesia adjustment


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 118 - 118
2 Jan 2024
Meng H Verrier S Grad S Li Z
Full Access

Pericytes are contractile, motile cells that surround the capillary. Recent studies have shown that pericytes promoted joint fibrosis and induced subchondral bone angiogenesis, indicating the role of pericytes in osteoarthritis (OA). However, whether pericytes are involved in regulating inflammatory and catabolic response, as well as fibrotic repair of cartilage is still unclear. Here we used 2D and 3D models to investigate the communication of pericytes and chondrocytes under inflammatory osteoarthritis conditions. CD34-CD146+ pericytes were isolated and sorted from human bone marrow. Human OA chondrocytes were isolated from OA joints. In 2D studies, monolayer cultured chondrocytes were treated +/- pericyte conditioned media, +/- 1ng/ml IL1β for 24h. In 3D studies, pericytes and chondrocytes were cultured within fibrin gel in 3D polyurethane scaffolds, separately or combined for 7 days, followed by treatment of +/- IL1β for another 7 days (Fig 2A). The inflammatory response, catabolic activity and expression of fibrosis markers of chondrocytes and pericytes were measured by ELISA and/or q-rtPCR. Pericytes had weak inflammatory, catabolic and fibrotic response to IL1β (data not shown). The 2D study showed that pericyte conditioned media promoted inflammation, catabolism and fibrosis markers of chondrocytes, in the absence of IL1β treatment (Figure 1). However, study in 3D showed that coculture of chondrocytes and pericytes reduced the inflammatory and catabolic response of chondrocytes to IL1β and induced fibrosis markers in chondrocytes (Figure 2). Pericytes are involved in regulating inflammatory response, catabolic response and fibrosis of chondrocytes. The opposite results from 2D and 3D experiments indicate the variety of the regulatory role of pericytes in the interaction with chondrocytes within different culture models. The underlying mechanism is under evaluation with on-going studies. Acknowledgements. This study was funded by SINPAIN project, from European Union's Horizon Europe research and innovation programme under Grant Agreement NO. 101057778. Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them. For any figures or tables, please contact the authors directly


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 81 - 81
1 Apr 2018
Ripmeester E Caron MMJ van Rhijn LW Welting TJM
Full Access

Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most common degenerative joint disease causing joint immobility and chronic pain. Treatment is mainly based on alleviating pain and reducing disease progression. During OA progression the chondrocyte undergoes a hypertrophic switch in which extracellular matrix (ECM) -degrading enzymes are released, actively degrading the ECM. However, cell biological based therapies to slow down or reverse this katabolic phenotype are still to be developed. Bone morphogenetic protein 7 (BMP-7) has been shown to have OA disease-modifying properties. BMP-7 suppresses the chondrocyte hypertrophic and katabolic phenotype and may be the first biological treatment to target the chondrocyte phenotype in OA. However, intra-articular use of BMP-7 is at risk in the proteolytic and hydrolytic joint-environment. Weekly intra-articular injections are necessary to maintain biological activity, a frequency unacceptable for clinical use. Additionally, production of GMP-grade BMP-7 is challenging and expensive. To enable its clinical use, we sought for BMP-7 mimicking peptides better compatible with the joint-environment while still biologically active and which potentially can be incorporated in a drug-delivery system. We hypothesized that human BMP-7 derived peptides are able to mimic the disease modifying properties of the full-length human BMP-7 protein on the OA chondrocyte phenotype. A BMP-7 peptide library was synthesized consisting of overlapping 20-mer peptides with 18 amino-acids overlap between sequential peptides. OA human articular chondrocytes (HACs) were isolated from OA cartilage from total knee arthroplasty (n=18 donors). HACs were exposed to BMP-7 (1 nM) or BMP-7 library peptides at different concentrations (1, 10, 100 or 1000 nM). Gene-expression levels of important chondrogenic-, hypertrophic-, cartilage degrading- and inflammatory mediators were determined by RT-qPCR. GAG and ALP activity were determined using a colorimetric assay and PGE levels were measured by EIA. During the BMP-7 peptide library screening human BMP-7 derived peptides were screened for their full-length human BMP-7 mimicking properties at different concentrations (1, 10, 100 or 1000nM) on a pool of human chondrocytes. Gene expression as well as GAG, ALP and PGE2 level analysis revealed two distinct peptide regions in the BMP-7 protein based on their pro-chondrogenic and anti-OA phenotype actions on human OA chondrocytes. The two most promising peptides were further analysed for their OA chondrocyte disease modifying properties in the presence of OA synovial fluid, showing similar OA phenotype suppressive activity. Conclusively, we successfully identified two peptide regions in the BMP-7 protein with in vitro OA suppressive actions. Further biochemical fine-tuning of the peptides, and in vivo evaluation, will potentially result in the first peptide-based experimental OA treatment, addressing the hypertrophic and katabolic chondrocyte phenotype in OA


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 21 - 21
1 Jan 2019
Madhusudan N Oppermann U Bountra C Oreffo ROC De Andres MC
Full Access

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a leading cause of joint pain, deformity and functional limitation. An imbalance of anabolic and catabolic activity results in destruction of the extracellular matrix of articular cartilage. While there is evidence to support the role of DNA methylation in the pathogenesis of OA, the effect of other epigenetic modifications is yet to be described. This study looks at the effect of two novel epigenetic modifiers, PFI-1, a bromodomain inhibitor, and SGC707, a histone methytransferase inhibitor, on gene expression in the pathogenesis of OA. Chondrocytes were extracted from OA femoral heads (n=6), cultured and incubated with increasing concentrations of the compounds. Cells were treated with media alone (control), interleukin 1-beta (IL-1β) plus oncostatin M (OSM) alone, or in combination with PFI-1 or SGC707. Levels of expression of iNOS, COX2, IL8, IL1B, matrix metalloproteinase-13 (MMP13), RUNX2 and COL9A1 were measured using qRT-PCR. PFI-1 (0.5 and 5µM) suppressed expression of catabolic genes in OA chondrocytes, at basal levels and when co-stimulated with IL-1β+OSM. While there was a decrease in catabolic gene expression (iNOS, COX2, IL8, IL1B and MMP13), RUNX2 expression was also supressed. There was no effect on expression of COL9A1, an anabolic chondrocytic gene. SGC707 (0.1 and 1µM) did not induce a reduction in expression of all the catabolic genes, with a less predictable effect on gene expression than PFI-1. This study has demonstrated that the BET inhibitor PFI-1 has a potent protective effect against cartilage degradation, through its action as an epigenetic modifier in modulating the expression of catabolic genes in OA chondrocytes. This further validates the role of epigenetics in OA, with potential implications for therapeutic interventions


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 80 - 80
1 Nov 2018
Madhusudan N Oppermann U Bountra C Oreffo R de Andrés M
Full Access

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a leading cause of joint deformity and functional limitation. An imbalance of anabolic and catabolic activity results in destruction of the extracellular matrix of articular cartilage. There is evidence to support the role of DNA methylation in the pathogenesis of OA, but the effect of other epigenetic modifiers is yet to be described. This study looks at the effect of novel epigenetic modulators, PFI-1, a bromodomain inhibitor, and SGC707, a histone methytransferase inhibitor, and their effects on gene expression in the pathogenesis of OA. Chondrocytes were extracted from OA femoral heads (n=6), cultured and incubated. Samples were treated with media alone (control), interleukin 1-beta (IL-1β) plus oncostatin M (OSM) alone, or in combination with increasing concentrations of PFI-1 or SGC707. Levels of expression of iNOS, COX2, IL8, IL1B, matrix metalloproteinase-13 (MMP13), RUNX2 and COL9A1 were measured using qRT-PCR, and expressed relative to GAPDH. PFI-1 (0.5 and 5µM) suppressed expression of catabolic genes in OA chondrocytes, at basal levels and when co-stimulated with IL-1β+OSM. Catabolic gene expression decreased (iNOS, COX2, IL-8, IL-1β and MMP), and RUNX2 expression was also supressed. There was no effect on expression of the anabolic gene COL9A1. SGC707 (0.1 and 1µM) did not induce a reduction in expression of all the catabolic genes. This study has demonstrated that PFI-1 has a potent protective effect against cartilage degradation, by modulating the expression of catabolic genes in OA chondrocytes. This further validates the role of epigenetics in OA, with implications for therapeutic interventions in the future


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 325 - 325
1 Jul 2014
Dunn S Crawford A Wilkinson M Bunning R Le Maitre C
Full Access

Summary Statement. IL-1β stimulation of human OA chondrocytes induces NFκB, ERK1/2, c-JUN, IκB and P38 signalling pathways. Pre-treatment with cannabinoid WIN-55 for 48 hours inhibits certain pathways, providing mechanisms for cannabinoids inhibitory actions on IL-1β induced cartilage degradation. Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) are involved in extracellular matrix (ECM) breakdown in osteoarthritis (OA) and their expression is regulated by nuclear factor kappa B (NFκB). In addition signalling pathways ERK1/2, c-JUN, IκB and P38 are activated in OA and are induced by inflammatory cytokine interleukin 1 (IL-1). Cannabinoids have been shown to reduce joint damage in animal models of arthritis. Synthetic cannabinoid WIN-55, 212-2 mesylate (WIN-55) significantly reduces IL-1β induced expression of MMP-3 and -13 in human OA chondrocytes, indicating a possible mechanism via which cannabinoids may act to prevent ECM breakdown. Here the effects of WIN-55 on IL-1β induced NFκB, ERK1/2, c-JUN, IκB and P38 phosphorylation in human OA chondrocytes has been investigated. Primary human chondrocytes were obtained from articular cartilage removed from patients with symptomatic OA during total knee replacement (Ethic approval:SMB002). Cartilage tissue was graded macroscopically 0–4 using the Outerbridge Classification method. Chondrocytes isolated from grade 2 cartilage and cultured in monolayer were pre-treated with 10 μM WIN-55 for 1 hour prior to stimulation with 10 ng/ml IL-1β for 30 minutes for investigation of NFκB, c-JUN, IκB and P38 phosphorylation. In addition chondrocytes were pre-treated with 10 μM WIN-55 for 30 minutes, 1, 3, 6, 24 and 48 hours prior to 10 ng/ml IL-1β stimulation for 30 minutes to investigate ERK1/2 phosphorylation. Dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) was used as a vehicle control at 0.1%. Immunocytochemistry was used to investigate the phosphorylation and translocation of NFκB. ERK1/2, c-JUN, IκB, and P38 activation was investigated using cell based ELISA. Immunocytochemical analysis showed chondrocytes stimulated with IL-1β induced NFκB phosphorylation and translocation to the nucleus. Chondrocytes treated with IL-1β with WIN-55 for 1 hour pre-treatment showed no inhibition of the IL-1β induced NFκB phosphorylation and translocation to the nucleus. WIN-55 treatment alone for 1 hour stimulated NFκB phosphorylation in the cytoplasm but not the nucleus. ELISA showed that phosphorylation of ERK1/2, c-JUN, IκB, and P38 was significantly induced by IL-1β following 30 minutes stimulation (p<0.05). Pre-treatment with WIN-55 for 1 hour had no significant effect on this IL-1β induced phosphorylation. However WIN-55 pre-treatment for 48 hours prior to IL-1β stimulation for 30 minutes, resulted in a significant decrease in ERK1/2 phosphorylation compared to IL-1β stimulation alone (p<0.05). WIN-55 treatment alone for 1 hour significantly induced c-JUN phosphorylation (p<0.05), but had no effect on IκB and P38 phosphorylation compared to DMSO control. IL-1β stimulation of ERK1/2 phosphorylation was not significantly affected by WIN-55 pre-treatment of 30 minutes, 1, 3, 6 and 24 hours. WIN-55 treatment alone for 48 hours significantly reduced ERK1/2 phosphorylation compared to DMSO control (p<0.05). WIN-55 treatment alone for 30 min, 1, 3, 6 and 24 hours had no significant effect on ERK1/2 phosphorylation compared to DMSO control. The results show that following 48 hours pre-treatment WIN-55 inhibits IL-1β induced ERK1/2 phosphorylation in human OA chondrocytes. Thus inhibitory effects of cannabinoids on IL-1β induced cartilage degradation may be mediated via modulation of ERK1/2 signalling