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1.
Cellular condensation of chondroprogenitors is a distinct cellular event in chondrogenesis. During this process, N-cadherin mediates cell-cell interactions responsible for the initial stage of cellular condensation and subsequently fibronectin contributes to cell-matrix interactions mediating a progression of chondrogenesis. We previously showed that chondrogenesis in mouse chondrogenic EC cells, ATDC5, was induced, at a high incidence in the presence of insulin, through formation of cellular condensation. In this study, we took advantage of the sequential progression of chondrogenesis in ATDC5 cells and evaluated, in vitro in these cells, the role of endogenous transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta in chondrogenesis. ATDC5 cells expressed TGF-beta2 mRNA at a cellular condensation stage. The treatment of undifferentiated ATDC5 cells with anti-TGF-beta32 neutralizing antibody inhibited the accumulation of Alcian blue stainable proteoglycan in a dose-dependent manner. Transfection of a dominant-negative mutant of mouse TGF-beta type II receptor to undifferentiated ATDC5 cells completely inhibited cellular condensation. Moreover, exogenously administered TGF-beta2 upregulated the expression of fibronectin and type II collagen (a phenotypic marker gene of chondrogenesis) mRNAs and downregulated that of N-cadherin mRNA in time- and dose-dependent manners. These results indicate that TGF-beta stimulates chondrogenesis via initiation of cellular condensation by transition from an initial N-cadherin-contributing stage to a fibronectin-contributing stage during processes of chondrogenesis in ATDC5 cells.  相似文献   

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The aggregation of chondroprogenitor mesenchymal cells into precartilage condensation represents one of the earliest events in chondrogenesis. N-cadherin is a key cell adhesion molecule implicated in chondrogenic differentiation. Recently, ADAM10-mediated cleavage of N-cadherin has been reported to play an important role in cell adhesion, migration, development and signaling. However, the significance of N-cadherin cleavage in chondrocyte differentiation has not been determined. In the present study, we found that the protein turnover of N-cadherin is accelerated during the early phase of chondrogenic differentiation in ATDC5 cells. Therefore, we generated the subclones of ATDC5 cells overexpressing wild-type N-cadherin, and two types of subclones overexpressing a cleavage-defective N-cadherin mutant, and examined the response of these cells to insulin stimulation. The ATDC5 cells overexpressing cleavage-defective mutants severely prevented the formation of cartilage aggregates, proteoglycan production and the induction of chondrocyte marker gene expression, such as type II collagen, aggrecan and type X collagen. These results suggested that the cleavage of N-cadherin is essential for chondrocyte differentiation.  相似文献   

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Tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha causes the degradation of articular cartilage in arthritis via direct actions on chondrocytes. However, it remains unknown whether TNF-alpha affects chondrogenesis in chondroprogenitors. In the present study, we assessed the effects of TNF-alpha in vitro on chondrogenesis using mouse clonal chondrogenic EC cells, ATDC5. TNF-alpha (10 ng/ml) stimulated [3H] thymidine incorporation in undifferentiated ATDC5 cells, and suppressed cartilaginous nodule formation and the accumulation of cartilage-specific proteoglycan. We recently showed that undifferentiated ATDC5 cells express BMP-4 and that exogenously administered BMP-4 promotes chondrogenesis in these cells. Interestingly, TNF-alpha up-regulated the expression of BMP-4 mRNA in undifferentiated ATDC5 cells in time- and dose-dependent manners. However, exogenously administered BMP-4 was not capable of reversing the inhibitory action of TNF-alpha on chondrogenesis in ATDC5 cells. These results indicate that TNF-alpha stimulates both cell proliferation and BMP-4 expression but inhibits chondrogenesis in chondroprogenitor-like ATDC5 cells.  相似文献   

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Delta-like 1 (Dlk1, also known as fetal antigen-1, FA1) is a member of Notch/Delta family that inhibits adipocyte and osteoblast differentiation; however, its role in chondrogenesis is still not clear. Thus, we overexpressed Dlk1/FA1 in mouse embryonic ATDC5 cells and tested its effects on chondrogenic differentiation. Dlk1/FA1 inhibited insulin-induced chondrogenic differentiation as evidenced by reduction of cartilage nodule formation and gene expression of aggrecan, collagen Type II and X. Similar effects were obtained either by using Dlk1/FA1-conditioned medium or by addition of a purified, secreted, form of Dlk1 (FA1) directly to the induction medium. The inhibitory effects of Dlk1/FA1 were dose-dependent and occurred irrespective of the chondrogenic differentiation stage: proliferation, differentiation, maturation, or hypertrophic conversion. Overexpression or addition of the Dlk1/FA1 protein to the medium strongly inhibited the activation of Akt, but not the ERK1/2, or p38 MAPK pathways, and the inhibition of Akt by Dlk1/FA1 was mediated through PI3K activation. Interestingly, inhibition of fibronectin expression by siRNA rescued the Dlk1/FA1-mediated inhibition of Akt, suggesting interaction of Dlk1/FA1 and fibronectin in chondrogenic cells. Our results identify Dlk1/FA1 as a novel regulator of chondrogenesis and suggest Dlk1/FA1 acts as an inhibitor of the PI3K/Akt pathways that leads to its inhibitory effects on chondrogenesis.  相似文献   

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Gene-trap mutagenesis is based on the notion that the random insertion of a trapping vector may disturb the function of inserted genes. Here, we applied this method to murine mesenchymal ATDC5 cells, which differentiate into mature chondrocytes in the presence of insulin. As the trap vector we used pPT1-geo, which lacks its own promoter and enhancer, but contains a lacZ-neo fusion gene as a reporter and selection marker driven by the promoter of the trapped gene. After pPT1-geo was introduced into ATDC5 cells by electroporation, the neomycin-resistant clones were screened for beta-galactosidase activity. The selected clones were cultured in differentiation medium to evaluate the chondrogenic phenotype. The clones no. 6-30 and 6-175, which exhibited impaired and accelerated mineralization, respectively, were subjected to further analysis. In clone no. 6-30 in which the gene coding for the p85alpha subunit of phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) was trapped, the expression of marker genes of early chondrocytes including collagen type II, aggrecan, and PTH/PTHrP receptor was delayed. The insulin-induced stimulation of growth was reduced in clone no. 6-30 compared with the parental ATDC5 cells. Moreover, treatment of parental ATDC5 cells with a specific inhibitor of PI3K, LY294002, phenocopied clone no. 6-30, suggesting the involvement of PI3K signaling in the chondrogenic differentiation of ATDC5 cells. Clone no. 6-175 with accelerated mineralization was revealed to have a gene homologous to human KIAA0312 trapped, whose function remains unclear. Taken together, the gene-trap in ATDC5 cells might be useful to identify the molecules involved in chondrogenic differentiation.  相似文献   

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Common in vitro protocols for chondrogenesis of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) induce an inadequate, hypertrophic differentiation cascade reminiscent of endochondral bone formation. We aimed to modify chondrogenic protocols in order to identify potent inducers, promotors, and inhibitors to achieve better chondrogenesis. Nine factors suspected to stimulate or inhibit chondrogenesis were used for chondrogenic in vitro induction of MSC. Differentiation was assessed by immunohistochemistry, alcian‐blue staining, qRT‐PCR, and quantification of alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity. Pre‐differentiated pellets were transplanted subcutaneously into SCID mice to investigate stable cartilage formation. Transforming growth factor (TGF)‐β was always required for chondrogenic differentiation and deposition of a collagen‐type‐II‐positive extracellular matrix, while bone morphogenetic protein (BMP)‐2, ‐4, ‐6, ‐7, aFGF, and IGF‐I (10 ng/ml) were alone not sufficiently inductive. Each of these factors allowed differentiation in combination with TGF‐β, however, without preventing collagen type X expression. bFGF or parathyroid hormone‐like peptide (PTHrP) inhibited the TGF‐β‐responsive COL2A1 and COL10A1 expression and ALP induction when added from day 0 or 21. In line with a reversible ALP inhibition, in vivo calcification of pellets was not prevented. Late up‐regulation of PTH1R mRNA suggests that early PTHrP effects may be mediated by a receptor‐independent pathway. While TGF‐β was a full inducer, bFGF and PTHrP were potent inhibitors for early and late chondrogenesis, seemed to induce a shift from matrix anabolism to catabolism, but did not selectively suppress COL10A1 expression. Within a developmental window of collagen type II+/collagen type X? cells, bFGF and PTHrP may allow inhibition of further differentiation toward hypertrophy to obtain stable chondrocytes for transplantation purposes. J. Cell. Physiol. 223: 84–93, 2010. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

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Insulin treatment of mouse ATDC5 chondroprogenitors induces these cells to differentiate into mature chondrocytes. To identify novel factors that are involved in this process, we carried out mutagenesis of ATDC5 cells through retroviral insertion and isolated two mutant clones incapable of differentiation. Inverse PCR analysis of these clones revealed that the retroviral DNA was inserted into the promoter region of the Rab23 gene, resulting in increased Rab23 expression. To investigate whether an elevated level of Rab23 protein led to inhibition of chondrogenic differentiation, we characterized ATDC5 cells that either overexpress endogenous Rab23 or stably express ectopic Rab23. Our results revealed that up-regulation of Rab23 can indeed inhibit chondrogenic differentiation with a concomitant down-regulation of matrix genes such as type II collagen and aggrecan. In addition, stable small interfering RNA knockdown of Rab23 also resulted in inhibition of chondrogenic differentiation as well as down-regulation of Sox9, a master regulator of chondrogenesis. Interestingly, Sox9 expression has recently been linked to Gli1, and we found that Rab23 knockdown decreased Gli1 expression in chondrocytes. Because the phenotypes of Rab23 mutations in mice and humans include defects in cartilage and bone development, our study suggests that Rab23 is involved in the control of Sox9 expression via Gli1 protein.  相似文献   

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Membrane-bound transferrin-like protein (MTf) is expressed in parallel with the expression of cartilage-characteristic genes during differentiation of chondrocytes, and the MTf level is much higher in cartilage than in other tissues. To investigate the role of MTf in cartilage, we examined the effects of growth factors on MTf expression in mouse prechondrogenic ATDC5 cells and the effect of MTf overexpression on differentiation of ATDC5 and mouse pluripotent mesenchymal C3H10T1/2 cells. In ATDC5 cultures, bone morphogenetic protein-2 and transforming growth factor-beta as well as insulin induced MTf mRNA expression when these peptides induced chondrogenic differentiation. Forced expression of rabbit MTf in ATDC5 cells induced aggrecan, type II collagen, matrilin-1, type X collagen mRNAs, and cell-shape changes from fibroblastic cells to spherical chondrocytes. Accordingly, the synthesis and accumulation of proteoglycans were higher in MTf-expressing cultures than in control cultures. These effects of MTf overexpression correlated with the MTf protein level on the cell surface and decreased in the presence of anti-MTf antibody. However, the aggrecan mRNA level in the ATDC5 cells overexpressing MTf was lower than that in wild type ATDC5 cells exposed to 10 microg/ml insulin. MTf overexpression in C3H10T1/2 cells also induced aggrecan and/or type II collagen mRNA but not the spherical phenotype. These findings suggest that the expression of MTf on the cell surface facilitates the differentiation of prechondrogenic cells, although MTf overexpression alone seems to be insufficient to commit pluripotent mesenchymal cells to the chondrocyte lineage.  相似文献   

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In bone, clock genes are involved in the circadian oscillation of bone formation and extracellular matrix expression. However, to date little attention has been paid to circadian rhythm in association with expression of clock genes during chondrogenesis in cartilage. In this study, we investigated the functional expression of different clock genes by chondrocytes in the course of cartilage development. The mRNA expression of types I, II, and X collagens exhibited a 24-h rhythm with a peak at zeitgeber time 6, in addition to a 24-h rhythmicity of all the clock genes examined in mouse femurs in vivo. Marked expression of different clock genes was seen in both osteoblastic MC3T3-E1 and chondrogenic ATDC5 cells in vitro, whereas parathyroid hormone (PTH) transiently increased period 1 (per1) mRNA expression at 1 h in both cell lines. Similar increases were seen in the mRNA levels for both per1 and per2 in prehypertrophic chondrocytes in metatarsal organotypic cultures within 2 h of exposure to PTH. PTH significantly activated the mouse per1 (mper1) and mper2 promoters but not the mper3 promoter in a manner sensitive to both a protein kinase A inhibitor and deletion of the cAMP-responsive element sequence (CRE) in ATDC5 cells. In HEK293 cells, introduction of brain and muscle aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator-like protein 1 (bmal1)/clock enhanced mouse type II collagen first intron reporter activity without affecting promoter activity, with reduction effected by either per1 or per2. These results suggest that PTH directly stimulates mper expression through a protein kinase A-CRE-binding protein signaling pathway for subsequent regulation of bmal1/clock-dependent extracellular matrix expression in cartilage.  相似文献   

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Utilizing ATDC5 murine chondrogenic cells and human articular chondrocytes, this study sought to develop facile, reproducible three-dimensional models of cartilage generation with the application of tissue engineering strategies, involving biodegradable poly(glycolic acid) scaffolds and rotating wall bioreactors, and micromass pellet cultures. Chondrogenic differentiation, assessed by histology, immunohistochemistry, and gene expression analysis, in ATDC5 and articular chondrocyte pellets was evident by the presence of distinct chondrocytes, expressing Sox-9, aggrecan, and type II collagen, in lacunae embedded in a cartilaginous matrix of type II collagen and proteoglycans. Tissue engineered explants of ATDC5 cells were reminiscent of cartilaginous structures composed of numerous chondrocytes, staining for typical chondrocytic proteins, in lacunae embedded in a matrix of type II collagen and proteoglycans. In comparison, articular chondrocyte explants exhibited areas of Sox-9, aggrecan, and type II collagen-expressing cells growing on fleece, and discrete islands of chondrocytic cells embedded in a cartilaginous matrix.  相似文献   

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