26 research outputs found
EFFECTS OF INSULIN ON EARLY OA CHANGES
Objective. Obesity is a state of chronic inflammation that is associated with insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM), as well as an increased risk of osteoarthritis (OA). This study was undertaken to define the links between obesity-associated inflammation, insulin resistance, and OA, by testing the hypotheses that 1) tumor necrosis factor (TNF) is critical in mediating these pathologic changes in OA, and 2) insulin has direct effects on the synovial joint that are compromised by insulin resistance.
Methods. The effects of TNF and insulin on catabolic gene expression were determined in fibroblast-like synoviocytes (FLS) isolated from human OA synovium. Synovial TNF expression and OA progression were examined in 2 mouse models, high-fat (HF) dietāfed obese mice with type 2 DM and TNF-knockout mice. Insulin resistance was investigated in synovium from patients with type 2 DM.
Results. Insulin receptors (IRs) were abundant in both mouse and human synovial membranes. Human OA FLS were insulin responsive, as indicated by the dose-dependent phosphorylation of IRs and Akt. In cultures of human OA FLS with exogenous TNF, the expression and release of MMP1, MMP13, and ADAMTS4 by FLS were markedly increased, whereas after treatment with insulin, these effects were selectively inhibited by >50%. The expression of TNF and its abundance in the synovium were elevated in samples from obese mice with type 2 DM. In TNF-knockout mice, increases in osteophyte formation and synovial hyperplasia associated with the HF diet were blunted. The synovium from OA patients with type 2 DM contained markedly more macrophages and showed elevated TNF levels as compared to the synovium from OA patients without diabetes. Moreover, insulin-dependent phosphorylation of IRs and Akt was blunted in cultures of OA FLS from patients with type 2 DM.
Conclusion. TNF appears to be involved in mediating the advanced progression of OA seen in type 2 DM. While insulin plays a protective, antiinflammatory role in the synovium, insulin resistance in patients with type 2 DM may impair this protective effect and promote the progression of OA
PTHrP prevents chondrocyte premature hypertrophy by inducing cyclin-D1-dependent Runx2 and Runx3 phosphorylation, ubiquitylation and proteasomal degradation
In chondrocytes, PTHrP maintains them in a proliferative state and prevents
premature hypertrophy. The mechanism by which PTHrP does this is not fully
understood. Both Runx2 and Runx3 are required for chondrocyte maturation. We
recently demonstrated that cyclin D1 induces Runx2 protein phosphorylation and
degradation. In the present studies, we tested the hypothesis that PTHrP
regulates both Runx2 and Runx3 protein stability through cyclin D1. We
analyzed the effects of cyclin D1 on Runx3 protein stability and function
using COS cells, osteoprogenitor C3H10T1/2 cells and chondrogenic RCJ3.1C5.18
cells. We found that cyclin D1 induced Runx3 degradation in a dose-dependent
manner and that both Myc-tagged Runx3 and endogenous Runx3 interact directly
with CDK4 in COS and RCJ3.1C5.18 cells. A conserved CDK recognition site was
identified in the C-terminal region of Runx3 by sequence analysis (residues
356-359). Pulse-chase experiments showed that the mutation of Runx3 at Ser356
to alanine (SA-Runx3) increased the half-life of Runx3. By contrast, the
mutation at the same serine residue to glutamic acid (SE-Runx3) accelerated
Runx3 degradation. In addition, SA-Runx3 was resistant to cyclin D1-induced
degradation. GST-Runx3 was strongly phosphorylated by CDK4 in vitro. By
contrast, CDK4 had no effect on the phosphorylation of SA-Runx3. Although both
wild-type and SE-Runx3 were ubiquitylated, this was not the case for SA-Runx3.
Runx3 degradation by cyclin D1 was completely blocked by the proteasome
inhibitor PS1. In C3H10T1/2 cells, SA-Runx3 had a greater effect on reporter
activity than SE-Runx3. The same was true for ALP activity in these cells. To
investigate the role of cyclin D1 in chondrocyte proliferation and
hypertrophy, we analyzed the growth plate morphology and expression of
chondrocyte differentiation marker genes in Ccnd1-knockout mice. The
proliferating and hypertrophic zones were significantly reduced and expression
of chondrocyte differentiation marker genes and ALP activity were enhanced in
2-week-old Ccnd1-knockout mice. PTHrP significantly suppressed
protein levels of both Runx2 and Runx3 in primary chondrocytes derived from
wild-type mice. By contrast, the suppressive effect of PTHrP on Runx2 and
Runx3 protein levels was completely abolished in primary chondrocytes derived
from Ccnd1-knockout mice. Our findings demonstrate that the cell
cycle proteins cyclin D1 and CDK4 induce Runx2 and Runx3 phosphorylation,
ubiquitylation and proteasomal degradation. PTHrP suppresses Runx2 and Runx3
protein levels in chondrocytes through cyclin D1. These results suggest that
PTHrP might prevent premature hypertrophy in chondrocytes, at least in part by
inducing degradation of Runx2 and Runx3 in a cyclin-D1-dependent manner
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Wholeāgenome RNA sequencing identifies distinct transcriptomic profiles in impingement cartilage between patients with femoroacetabular impingement and hip osteoarthritis
Femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) has a strong clinical association with the development of hip osteoarthritis (OA); however, the pathobiological mechanisms underlying the transition from focal impingement to global joint degeneration remain poorly understood. The purpose of this study is to use whole-genome RNA sequencing to identify and subsequently validate differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in femoral head articular cartilage samples from patients with FAI and hip OA secondary to FAI. Thirty-seven patients were included in the study with whole-genome RNA sequencing performed on 10 gender-matched patients in the FAI and OA cohorts and the remaining specimens were used for validation analyses. We identified a total of 3531 DEGs between the FAI and OA cohorts with multiple targets for genes implicated in canonical OA pathways. Quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction validation confirmed increased expression of FGF18 and WNT16 in the FAI samples, while there was increased expression of MMP13 and ADAMTS4 in the OA samples. Expression levels of FGF18 and WNT16 were also higher in FAI samples with mild cartilage damage compared to FAI samples with severe cartilage damage or OA cartilage. Our study further expands the knowledge regarding distinct genetic reprogramming in the cartilage between FAI and hip OA patients. We independently validated the results of the sequencing analysis and found increased expression of anabolic markers in patients with FAI and minimal histologic cartilage damage, suggesting that anabolic signaling may be increased in early FAI with a transition to catabolic and inflammatory gene expression as FAI progresses towards more severe hip OA. Clinical significance:Cam-type FAI has a strong clinical association with hip OA; however, the cellular pathophysiology of disease progression remains poorly understood. Several previous studies have demonstrated increased expression of inflammatory markers in FAI cartilage samples, suggesting the involvement of these inflammatory pathways in the disease progression. Our study further expands the knowledge regarding distinct genetic reprogramming in the cartilage between FAI and hip OA patients. In addition to differences in inflammatory gene expression, we also identified differential expression in multiple pathways involved in hip OA progression
Cyclophilin D Knock-Out Mice Show Enhanced Resistance to Osteoporosis and to Metabolic Changes Observed in Aging Bone
<div><p>Pathogenic factors associated with aging, such as oxidative stress and hormone depletion converge on mitochondria and impair their function via opening of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (MPTP). The MPTP is a large non-selective pore regulated by cyclophilin D (CypD) that disrupts mitochondrial membrane integrity. MPTP involvement has been firmly established in degenerative processes in heart, brain, and muscle. Bone has high energy demands and is therefore expected to be highly sensitive to mitochondrial dysfunction. Despite this, the role of mitochondria and the MPTP in bone maintenance and bone pathology has not been elucidated. Our goal was to determine whether mitochondria are impaired in aging bone and to see if protecting mitochondria from MPTP opening via CypD deletion protects against bone loss. We found that bone mass, strength, and formation progressively decline over the course of 18 months in C57BL/6J mice. Using metabolomics and electron microscopy, we determined that oxidative metabolism is impaired in aging bone leading to a glycolytic shift, imbalance in nucleotides, and decreased NAD<sup>+</sup>/NADH ratio. Mitochondria in osteocytes appear swollen which is a major marker of MPTP opening. CypD deletion by CypD knockout mouse model (CypD KO) protects against bone loss in 13- and 18-month-old mice and prevents decline in bone formation and mitochondrial changes observed in wild type C57BL/6J mice. Together, these data demonstrate that mitochondria are impaired in aging bone and that CypD deletion protects against this impairment to prevent bone loss. This implicates CypD-regulated MPTP and mitochondrial dysfunction in the impairment of bone cells and in aging-related bone loss. Our findings suggest mitochondrial metabolism as a new target for bone therapeutics and inhibition of CypD as a novel strategy against bone loss.</p></div
CypD KO mice do not show bone loss at 13 and 18 months of age.
<p>Representative microCT images of mouse tibiae, femurs, and L3 from 3-, 13-, and 18- mo-old CypD KO mice and graphs showing quantitative volumetric analysis of microCT data. Data are Means Ā± SD (n = 5ā15). *, <i>p</i><0.05 vs 3 mo as determined with ANOVA.</p
CypD deletion protects against metabolic changes in bone samples from 13-mo-old mice.
<p>Metabolomic analysis of mouse bones using MS-LC. Data are Means Ā± SD (n = 3). *, <i>p</i><0.05 as determined with <i>t-</i>test.</p