首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Mechanical stimulation is critically important for the maintenance of normal articular cartilage integrity. Molecular events regulating responses of chondrocytes to mechanical forces are beginning to be defined. Chondrocytes from normal human knee joint articular cartilage show increased levels of aggrecan mRNA following 0.33 Hz mechanical stimulation whilst at the same time relative levels of MMP3 mRNA are decreased. This anabolic response, associated with membrane hyperpolarisation, is activated via an integrin-dependent interleukin (IL)-4 autocrine/paracrine loop. Work in our laboratory suggests that this chondroprotective response may be aberrant in osteoarthritis (OA). Chondrocytes from OA cartilage show no changes in aggrecan or MMP3 mRNA following 0.33 Hz mechanical stimulation. alpha5beta1 integrin is the mechanoreceptor in both normal and OA chondrocytes but downstream signalling pathways differ. OA chondrocytes show membrane depolarisation following 0.33 Hz mechanical stimulation consequent to activation of an IL1beta autocrine/paracrine loop. IL4 signalling in OA chondrocytes is preferentially through the type I (IL4alpha/cgamma) receptor rather than via the type II (IL4alpha/IL13R) receptor. Altered mechanotransduction and signalling in OA may contribute to changes in chondrocyte behaviour leading to increased cartilage breakdown and disease progression.  相似文献   

2.
Mechanical forces influence articular cartilage structure by regulating chondrocyte activity. Mechanical stimulation results in activation of an alpha5beta1 integrin dependent intracellular signal cascade involving focal adhesion kinase and protein kinase C, triggering the release of interleukin-4 from the cell. In normal HAC the response to physiological mechanical stimulation is characterised by increased levels of aggrecan mRNA and a decrease in levels of mRNA for matrix metalloproteinase 3 (MMP-3), the net result of which would be to maintain and optimise cartilage structure and function. This protective/anabolic response is not seen when chondrocytes from osteoarthritic cartilage are subjected to an identical mechanical stimulation regime. Following the observation that the neurotransmitter substance P is involved in chondrocyte mechanotransduction the present study was undertaken to establish potential roles for glutamate receptors in the control of chondrocyte mechanical responses. Using immunohistochemistry and RTPCR normal and OA chondrocytes are shown to express NR1 and NR2a subunits of the NMDA receptor. Addition of NMDA receptor agonists to chondrocytes in primary culture resulted in changes in membrane potential consistent with expression of functional receptors. NMDA receptor antagonists inhibited the hyperpolarisation response of normal chondrocytes to mechanical stimulation but had no effect on the depolarisation response of osteoarthritic chondrocytes to mechanical stimulation. These studies indicate that at least one subset of the NMDA receptor family of molecules is expressed in cartilage and may have important modulatory effects on mechanotransduction and cellular responses following mechanical stimulation. Indeed the results suggest that there is an alteration of NMDA receptor signalling in OA chondrocytes, which may be critical in the abnormal response of OA chondrocytes to mechanical stimulation. Thus NMDA receptors appear to be involved in the regulation of human articular chondrocyte responses to mechanical stimulation, and in OA, mechanotransduction pathways may be modified as a result of altered activation and function of these receptors.  相似文献   

3.
4.
The importance of biomechanical forces in regulating normal chondrocyte metabolism is well established and the mechanisms whereby mechanical forces are transduced into biochemical responses by chondrocytes are beginning to be understood. Previous studies have indicated that cyclical mechanical stimulation induces increased aggrecan gene expression in normal but not osteoarthritic chondrocytes in monolayer. It remains unclear, however, whether these effects on gene expression are associated with changes in proteoglycan production and whether any changes in proteoglycan expression is dependent on integrins or integrin associated proteins. Normal and osteoarthritic articular chondrocytes in monolayer were exposed to 0.33 Hz mechanical stimulation for 20 min in the absence or presence of function modifying anti-integrin antibodies. Following stimulation GAG and proteoglycan (PG) synthesis was assessed by DMMB assay and western blotting. Mechanical stimulation of normal chondrocytes resulted in increased GAG synthesis that was blocked by the presence of antibodies to alpha5 and alphaVbeta5 integrins and CD47. Electrophoretic patterns of PGs released from normal chondrocytes following mechanical stimulation showed an increase in newly-synthesized aggrecan that was not fragmented or degraded. Chondrocytes from osteoarthritic cartilage showed lower levels of GAG production when compared to normal chondrocytes and synthesis was not influenced by mechanical stimulation. These studies show that chondrocytes derived from normal and OA cartilage have different matrix production responses to mechanical stimulation and suggest previously unrecognised roles for alphaVbeta5 integrin in regulation of chondrocyte responses to biomechanical stimulation.  相似文献   

5.
Metabolic, biochemical and biomechanical differences between ankle and knee joint cartilage and chondrocytes including resistance to the effects of catabolic cytokines and fibronectin fragments may be relevant to differences in prevalence of OA in these joints. Although there is increasing information available on how chondrocytes from knee and hip joint cartilage recognise and respond to mechanical stimuli, knowledge of mechanotransduction in ankle joint chondrocytes is limited. This study was undertaken to (i) establish whether the response of normal ankle joint derived chondrocytes to mechanical stimulation in vitro was similar to that of normal and osteoarthritic knee joint derived chondrocytes and (ii) to investigate whether these chondrocytes showed differences in expression of integrin associated regulatory and signalling molecules. Unlike normal knee joint chondrocytes, ankle joint chondrocytes did not show an increase in relative levels of aggrecan mRNA when mechanically stimulated. No obvious change in protein tyrosine phosphorylation was seen in ankle chondrocytes subsequent to mechanical stimulation but these cells expressed elevated levels of tyrosine phosphorylated proteins at rest when compared to normal knee joint chondrocytes. Ankle joint chondrocytes showed an increase in protein kinase B phosphorylation following 1 min 0.33 Hz stimulation which was inhibited by the presence of antibodies to alpha5beta1 integrin. Ankle joint chondrocytes appeared to show significant differences in levels of the integrin-associated proteins CD98, CD147 and galectin 3, PKCgamma and differences in responses to glutamate were seen. Chondrocytes from ankle and knee joint cartilage respond differently to 0.33 Hz mechanical stimulation. This may be related to modified integrin-dependent mechanotransduction as a result of changes in expression of integrin regulatory molecules such as CD98 or differential expression and function of downstream components of the mechanotransduction pathway such as PKC or NMDA receptors.  相似文献   

6.
Oxidative stress leads to increased risk for osteoarthritis (OA) but the precise mechanism remains unclear. We undertook this study to clarify the impact of oxidative stress on the progression of OA from the viewpoint of oxygen free radical induced genomic instability, including telomere instability and resulting replicative senescence and dysfunction in human chondrocytes. Human chondrocytes and articular cartilage explants were isolated from knee joints of patients undergoing arthroplastic knee surgery for OA. Oxidative damage and antioxidative capacity in OA cartilage were investigated in donor-matched pairs of intact and degenerated regions of tissue isolated from the same cartilage explants. The results were histologically confirmed by immunohistochemistry for nitrotyrosine, which is considered to be a maker of oxidative damage. Under treatment with reactive oxygen species (ROS; 0.1 μmol/l H2O2) or an antioxidative agent (ascorbic acid: 100.0 μmol/l), cellular replicative potential, telomere instability and production of glycosaminoglycan (GAG) were assessed in cultured chondrocytes. In tissue cultures of articular cartilage explants, the presence of oxidative damage, chondrocyte telomere length and loss of GAG to the medium were analyzed in the presence or absence of ROS or ascorbic acid. Lower antioxidative capacity and stronger staining of nitrotyrosine were observed in the degenerating regions of OA cartilages as compared with the intact regions from same explants. Immunostaining for nitrotyrosine correlated with the severity of histological changes to OA cartilage, suggesting a correlation between oxidative damage and articular cartilage degeneration. During continuous culture of chondrocytes, telomere length, replicative capacity and GAG production were decreased by treatment with ROS. In contrast, treatment with an antioxidative agent resulted in a tendency to elongate telomere length and replicative lifespan in cultured chondrocytes. In tissue cultures of cartilage explants, nitrotyrosine staining, chondrocyte telomere length and GAG remaining in the cartilage tissue were lower in ROS-treated cartilages than in control groups, whereas the antioxidative agent treated group exhibited a tendency to maintain the chondrocyte telomere length and proteoglycan remaining in the cartilage explants, suggesting that oxidative stress induces chondrocyte telomere instability and catabolic changes in cartilage matrix structure and composition. Our findings clearly show that the presence of oxidative stress induces telomere genomic instability, replicative senescence and dysfunction of chondrocytes in OA cartilage, suggesting that oxidative stress, leading to chondrocyte senescence and cartilage ageing, might be responsible for the development of OA. New efforts to prevent the development and progression of OA may include strategies and interventions aimed at reducing oxidative damage in articular cartilage.  相似文献   

7.
Apoptosis of articular chondrocytes is associated with the pathogenesis of osteoarthritis (OA). Recently, we demonstrated that hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-2α, encoded by Epas1, causes OA cartilage destruction by regulating the expression of various matrix-degrading enzymes. Here, we investigated the involvement of HIF-2α in chondrocyte apoptosis and OA cartilage destruction. HIF-2α levels in human and mouse OA chondrocytes were markedly elevated in association with increased apoptosis of articular chondrocytes. Overexpression or knockdown of HIF-2α alone did not cause chondrocyte apoptosis. However, HIF-2α expression markedly increased chondrocyte apoptosis in the presence of an agonistic anti-Fas (CD95) antibody. HIF-2α enhanced Fas expression and potentiated downstream signaling pathways, increasing the activity of initiator and executioner caspases. Overexpression of HIF-2α in mouse cartilage tissue, either by intra-articular injection of Epas1 adenovirus (Ad-Epas1) or in the context of chondrocyte-specific Epas1 transgenic mice, increased chondrocyte apoptosis and cartilage destruction. In contrast, chondrocyte-specific knockout of Epas1 in mice suppressed DMM (destabilization of the medial meniscus)-induced chondrocyte apoptosis and inhibited OA cartilage destruction. Moreover, Fas-deficient mice exhibited diminished chondrocyte apoptosis and OA cartilage destruction in response to Ad-Epas1 injection or DMM surgery. Taken together, our results demonstrate that HIF-2α potentiates Fas-mediated chondrocyte apoptosis, which is associated with OA cartilage destruction.  相似文献   

8.
Extracellular purines can act at purinoceptors to influence metabolic processes. Nucleotide-metabolizing ectoenzymes may modulate such purinergic effects, and their occurrence in a tissue may suggest the presence of purinoceptors. Thus, following the identification of ecto-nucleoside triphosphate pyrophosphatase in cultured human articular chondrocytes, we have studied whether these cells express P2-type purinoceptors. Release of prostaglandin E (PGE) was monitored, since articular chondrocytes synthesize and secrete PGE, and activation of P2-purinoceptors frequently results in enhanced prostaglandin production. Extracellular ATP and ADP stimulated PGE production, whereas AMP and adenosine had only limited effects. ATP concentrations as low as 5 microM were effective, and maximal responses were achieved at 50-100 microM ATP. GTP, UTP and ITP also elicited responses, but tended to be less effective than ATP at equivalent concentrations. Of the analogues of ATP that were tested, only adenosine 5'-(beta,gamma-methylene)triphosphate stimulated PGE production. The response to extracellular ATP was virtually abolished by indomethacin. Treatment of the cells with the P1-purinoceptor antagonist, 8-phenyltheophylline, or with pertussis toxin reduced both basal and ATP-stimulated PGE production, but did not substantially decrease the ratio of ATP-stimulated to basal PGE production. These results indicate the presence of P2-purinoceptors in cultured human articular chondrocytes, and suggest that extracellular ATP may have physiological and pathological effects in human articular cartilage.  相似文献   

9.
Mitochondrial dysfunction in osteoarthritis   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
In osteoarthritis (OA) a time or age dependent process leads to aberrant cartilage structure which is characterized by reduced number of chondrocytes, loss of existing cartilage extracellular matrix, the production of matrix with abnormal composition and pathologic matrix calcification. Because chondrocyte matrix synthesis and mineralization are modulated by the balance between ATP generation and consumption, the mechanism by which chondrocytes generate energy have been a topic of interest. The analysis of mitochondrial respiratory chain (MRC) activity in OA chondrocytes shows a significant decrease in complexes II and III compared to normal chondrocytes. On the other hand, mitochondrial mass is increased in OA, as demonstrated by a significant rise in CS activity. Furthermore, OA cells show a reduction in the mitochondrial membrane potential (deltapsim) as demonstrated by using the fluorescent probe JC-1. OA cartilage contains high number of apoptotic chondrocytes, and mitochondria play a key role in apoptosis. Interestingly, OA cartilages show markedly elevated Bcl-2 and caspasa-3 expression. This expression is also correlated with chondrocyte apoptosis and OA lesions. The pathogenesis of OA includes elaboration of increased amounts of NO as a consequence of up-regulation of chondrocyte-inducible NO synthase induced by IL-1, TNF-alpha and other factors. NO reduces chondrocyte survival and induces cell death with morphologic changes characteristic of chondrocyte apoptosis. NO reduces the activity of complex IV and decreases the deltapsim as measured as the ratio of red/green fluorescence. Furthermore, NO induces the mRNA expression of caspase-3 and -7, and it reduces the expression of mRNA bcl-2 and the bcl-2 protein synthesis. Some studies suggest that the chondrocyte mitochondria are specialized for calcium transport and are important in the calcification of the extracellular matrix. Mineral formation has been demonstrated in matrix vesicles (MV) and within mitochondria. Direct suppression of mitochondrial respiration promoted MV-mediated mineralization in chondrocytes. Regulation of MRC may be one of the signaling pathways by which NO modulates articular cartilage matrix biosynthesis and pathologic mineralization. After age 40, the incidence of OA in humans increases progressively with increasing age. Studies show a trend to statistic significance between the age and the reduction of complex I activity of human normal chondrocytes. However, the study of relation between age and deltapsim in normal chondrocytes do not demonstrate any significant correlation. It has been reported that as the number of population doublings increased, mitochondrial DNA was degraded and the number of mitochondria per chondrocyte decline. One approach for determining the role of mitochondria in OA is to determine the effects of the MRC inhibition and to compare them with the findings in OA. Inhibition of MRC with antimycin prevents the normal ability of TGFbeta to increase excretion of Pi, thereby worsening deposition of pathologic HA crystals. In chondrocytes, the inhibition of complex IV with NaN3 modified both the deltapsim and the survival of cells inducing apoptosis. Inhibition of complex I with rotenone increases the expression and synthesis of Bcl-2 and Cox-2, both effects are similar effects to produced by IL-1 in human chondrocytes.  相似文献   

10.
Osteoarthritis (OA) is characterized by cartilage degradation. The chondrocyte is the only cell type present in mature cartilage, and it is important in the control of cartilage integrity. The aim of this study was to analyze, by a proteomic approach, the changes that are characteristic of OA chondrocytes, and to identify new OA-related proteins. Chondrocytes were isolated from the cartilage of ten OA patients undergoing joint replacement and ten donors with no history of joint disease. Whole-cell proteins were resolved by 2-DE and stained with SYPRO Ruby. Protein expression patterns of 2-DE gels from OA and normal chondrocyte proteins were analyzed with PDQuest 7.3.1 software. OA-related proteins were identified by MALDI-TOF or MALDI-TOF/TOF MS. The results were validated for ANXA1, GSTO1, GRP78, and HSP90beta in cells by Western blotting and in tissue cartilage by immunohistochemistry. Results showed an average of 700 protein spots that were present in the 2-DE gels. Compared to normal chondrocytes, 19 protein spots were found to be significantly increased in OA cells (ratio OA:N> or =2.0, p<0.05), whereas nine were decreased in OA chondrocytes (ratio OA:N< or =0.5, p<0.05). Three stress response proteins were increased (HSP90beta, GRP78, and GRP94) and three proteins involved in glycolysis were decreased (enolase, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, and fructose biphosphate aldolase). Functionally, almost all proteins could be classified as proteins involved in cellular metabolism (33%), structure (21%), or protein targeting (21%).  相似文献   

11.
12.
The articular cartilage of diarthrodial joints experiences a variety of stresses, strains and pressures that result from normal activities of daily living. In normal cartilage, the extracellular matrix exists as a highly organized composite of specialized macromolecules that distributes loads at the bony ends. The chondrocyte response to mechanical loading is recognized as an integral component in the maintenance of articular cartilage matrix homeostasis. With inappropriate mechanical loading of the joint, as occurs with traumatic injury, ligament instability, bony malalignment or excessive weight bearing, the cartilage exhibits manifestations characteristic of osteoarthritis. Breakdown of cartilage in osteoarthritis involves degradation of the extracellular matrix macromolecules and decreased expression of chondrocyte proteins necessary for normal joint function. Osteoarthritic cartilage often exhibits increased amounts of type I collagen and synthesis of proteoglycans characteristic of immature cartilage. The shift in cartilage phenotype in response to altered load yields a matrix that fails to support normal joint function. Mathematical modeling and experimental studies in animal models confirm an association between altered loading of diarthrotic joints and arthritic changes. Both types of studies implicate shear forces as a critical component in the destructive profile. The severity of cartilage destruction in response to altered loads appears linked to expression of biological factors influencing matrix integrity and cellular metabolism. Determining how shear stress alters chondrocyte metabolism is fundamental to understanding how to limit matrix destruction and stimulate cartilage repair and regeneration. At present, the precise biochemical and molecular mechanisms by which shear forces alter chondrocyte metabolism from a normal to a degenerative phenotype remain unclear. The results presented here address the hypothesis that articular chondrocyte metabolism is modulated by direct effects of shear forces that act on the cell through mechanotransduction processes. The purpose of this work is to develop critical knowledge regarding the basic mechanisms by which mechanical loading modulates cartilage metabolism in health and disease. This presentation will describe the effects of using fluid induced shear stress as a model system for stimulation of articular chondrocytes in vitro. The fluid induced shear stress was applied using a cone viscometer system to stimulate all the cells uniformly under conditions of minimal turbulence. The experiments were carried using high-density primary monolayer cultures of normal and osteoarthritic human and normal bovine articular chondrocytes. The analysis of the cellular response included quantification of cytokine release, matrix metalloproteinase expression and activation of intracellular signaling pathways. The data presented here show that articular chondrocytes exhibit a dose- and time-dependent response to shear stress that results in the release of soluble mediators and extracellular matrix macromolecules. The data suggest that the chondrocyte response to mechanical stimulation contributes to the maintenance of articular cartilage homeostasis in vivo.  相似文献   

13.
The status of the Golgi complex in normal vs osteoarthrotic (OA) cartilage has not yet been studied. A monoclonal antibody, MAb 58-K-9, allowed scoring of Golgi labeling intensity. In addition, ultrastructural assessment enabled us to focus on the distribution and relation between the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and Golgi membranes. The study was performed in both normal and partially menisectomized OA-induced rat cartilage 20 and 45 days after surgery. Comparing Golgi immunolabeling intensities (mean +/- SEM) revealed a highly significant difference between normal (9.98 +/- 1.25), 20-day (2.49 +/- 0.34), and 45-day (0.82 +/- 0.22) cartilage. Moreover, chondrocytes from normal cartilage displayed 71.18% of labeling intensity in contrast to OA cartilage, in which chondrocyte labeling intensities were 24.95% (20 days) and 8.11% (45 days). OA chondrocytes appeared to display an overall reduction in Golgi labeling intensity, suggesting disruption of this organelle as the OA damage progressed. Interestingly, many 20-day OA-induced chondrocytes exhibited bubble-like Golgi immunolabeling compartmentalizing the cytoplasm, concomitant with putative apoptotic nuclear changes. At the same time, OA chondrocytes with a typical ultrastructural apoptotic pattern revealed a prominent ER gathered together with Golgi vesicles and saccules, also appearing to compartmentalize chondrocyte cytoplasm. We speculate about the role of Golgi modifications and apoptosis in OA pathogenesis.  相似文献   

14.
Invited review: the mitochondrion in osteoarthritis   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
In a variety of tissues, cumulative oxidative stress, disrupted mitochondrial respiration, and mitochondrial damage promote aging, cell death, and ultimately, functional failure and degeneration. Because articular cartilage chondroyctes are highly glycolytic, mitochondrially mediated pathogenesis has not been previously applied in models for pathogenesis of osteoarthritis (OA), a cartilage degenerative disease that increases markedly in aging. However, chondrocyte mitochondria respire in vitro and they demonstrate swelling and changes in number in situ in the course of OA. Normal chondrocyte mitochondrial function is hypothesized to critically support adenosine triphosphate (ATP) reserves in functional stressed chondrocytes during OA evolution. In this model, disruption of chondrocyte respiration by nitric oxide, a mediator markedly up-regulated in OA cartilage, is centrally involved in chondrocyte functional compromise. Furthermore, mitochondrial dysfunction can mediate several specific pathogenic pathways implicated in OA. These include oxidative stress, inadequacy of chondrocyte biosynthetic and growth responses, up-regulated chondrocyte cytokine-induced inflammation and matrix catabolism, increased chondrocyte apoptosis, and pathologic cartilage matrix calcification. In addition, the direct, sublethal impairment of chondrocyte mitochondrial ATP synthesis in vitro decreases matrix synthesis and increases matrix calcification ('disease in a dish'). The weight of evidence reviewed herein strongly supports chondrocyte mitochondrial impairment as a mediator of the establishment and progression of OA.  相似文献   

15.
The characteristics of spontaneous calcium (Ca(2+)) oscillation and mechanically induced Ca(2+) waves in articular chondrocytes were studied. In some, but not all, chondrocytes in sliced cartilage and primary cultures, we observed spontaneous oscillation of intracellular Ca(2+) that never spread to adjacent cells. In contrast, a mechanical stimulus to a single cell by touching with a glass rod induced an increase of intracellular Ca(2+) that spread to neighboring cells in a wave-like manner, even though there was no physical contact between the cells. This indicated the release of some paracrine factor from the mechanically stimulated cells. Application of ultrasonic vibration also induced an oscillation of intracellular Ca(2+). The application of a uridine 5'-triphosphate (UTP), UTP, induced a transient increase in intracellular Ca(2+) and the release of adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) in cultured chondrocytes. A P2 receptor antagonist (suramin) and blockers of Cl(-) channels, niflumic acid and 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid (DIDS), reduced the UTP-induced ATP release. The results indicated that Cl(-) channels were involved in the extracellular release of ATP following mechanical or P2Y receptor stimulation. Thus, ATP stimulation of P2Y receptors elicits an increase in intracellular Ca(2+), triggering further release of ATP from adjacent cells, thereby expanding the Ca(2+) wave in chondrocytes.  相似文献   

16.
ATP can be released from endothelial cells, and this release is increased by intraluminal flow in blood vessels. In the present study, the effect of extracellular ATP (1 microM) on flow-induced vasodilatation was investigated in isolated and pressurized rat small mesenteric arteries. In the absence of extracellular ATP, only 46% of arteries developed dilatation in response to flow, and this response was both transient and unstable. In marked contrast, with ATP present, all vessels developed a prolonged and stable dilatation in response to flow. Even in the vessels that failed to respond to flow in the absence of ATP, dilatation could be stimulated once ATP was present. The ability of ATP to facilitate flow-induced vasodilatation was mimicked by UTP (1 microM), a P2Y agonist, or 3'-O-(4-benzoyl)benzoyl ATP (BzATP; 10 microM), an agonist for P2X1, P2X7, and P2Y11 purinoceptors. The involvement of P2X7 purinoceptors was further supported by the inhibitory effect of KN-62 (1 microM), a P2X7 antagonist, on the action of BzATP. P2X1 and P2X3 purinoceptors were not involved because their receptor agonist alpha,beta-methylene ATP had no effect. The facilitating effect of ATP on flow dilatation was also attenuated by the combined application of reactive blue 2 (100 microM), a P2Y antagonist, and suramin (100 microM), a nonselective P2X and P2Y antagonist. Furthermore, flow-induced dilatation obtained in the presence of ATP was reproducible. In contrast, in the additional presence of the ectonucleotidase inhibitor ARL-67156 (10 microM), although the first dilatation was normal, the responses to the second and later exposures to flow were greatly attenuated. The nonhydrolyzable ATP analogs adenosine-5'-(3-thiotriphosphate)trilithium salt (1 microM) and adenosine 5'-(beta,gamma-imido) triphosphate tetralithium salt hydrate (10 microM) had similar effects to those of ARL-67156. These data suggest that ATP acts through both P2X and P2Y purinoceptors to facilitate flow-induced vasodilatation and that ectonucleotidases prevent this effect by degrading ATP on the endothelial cell surface.  相似文献   

17.
Mechanical stress plays a key role in regulating cartilage degradation in osteoarthritis (OA). The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects and mechanisms of mechanical stress on articular cartilage. A total of 80 male Sprague-Dawley rats were randomly divided into eight groups (n = 10 for each group): control group (CG), OA group (OAG), and CG or OAG subjected to low-, moderate-, or high-intensity treadmill exercise (CL, CM, CH, OAL, OAM, and OAH, respectively). Chondrocytes were obtained from the knee joints of rats; they were cultured on Bioflex 6-well culture plates and subjected to different durations of cyclic tensile strain (CTS) with or without exposure to interleukin-1β (IL-1β). The results of the histological score, immunohistochemistry, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and western-blot analyses indicated that there were no differences between CM and CG, but OAM showed therapeutic effects compared with OAG. However, CH and OAH experienced more cartilage damage than CG and OAG, respectively. CTS had no therapeutic effects on collagen II of normal chondrocytes, which is consistent with findings after treadmill exercise. However, CTS for 4 hr could alleviate the chondrocyte damage induced by IL-1β by activating AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) phosphorylation and suppressing nuclear translocation of nuclear factor (NF)-κB p65. Our findings indicate that mechanical stress had no therapeutic effects on normal articular cartilage and chondrocytes; mechanical stress only caused damage with excessive stimulation. Still, moderate biomechanical stress could reduce sensitization to the inflammatory response of articular cartilage and chondrocytes through the AMPK/NF-κB signaling pathway.  相似文献   

18.
Voltage-sensitive calcium channels (VSCC) regulate cellular calcium influx, one of the earliest responses to mechanical stimulation in osteoblasts. Here, we postulate that T-type VSCCs play an essential role in bone mechanical response to load and participate in events leading to the pathology of load-induced OA. Repetitive mechanical insult was used to induce OA in Cav3.2 T-VSCC null and wild-type control mouse knees. Osteoblasts (MC3T3-E1) and chondrocytes were treated with a selective T-VSCC inhibitor and subjected to fluid shear stress to determine how blocking of T-VSCCs alters the expression profile of each cell type upon mechanical stimulation. Conditioned-media (CM) obtained from static and sheared MC3T3-E1 was used to assess the effect of osteoblast-derived factors on the chondrocyte phenotype. T-VSCC null knees exhibited significantly lower focal articular cartilage damage than age-matched controls. In vitro inhibition of T-VSCC significantly reduced the expression of both early and late mechanoresponsive genes in osteoblasts but had no effect on gene expression in chondrocytes. Furthermore, treatment of chondrocytes with CM obtained from sheared osteoblasts induced expression of markers of hypertrophy in chondrocytes and this was nearly abolished when osteoblasts were pre-treated with the T-VSCC-specific inhibitor. These results indicate that T-VSCC plays a role in signaling events associated with induction of OA and is essential to the release of osteoblast-derived factors that promote an early OA phenotype in chondrocytes. Further, these findings suggest that local inhibition of T-VSCC may serve as a therapy for blocking load-induced bone formation that results in cartilage degeneration.  相似文献   

19.

Introduction

AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) maintains cultured chondrocyte matrix homeostasis in response to inflammatory cytokines. AMPK activity is decreased in human knee osteoarthritis (OA) chondrocytes. Liver kinase B1 (LKB1) is one of the upstream activators of AMPK. Hence, we examined the relationship between LKB1 and AMPK activity in OA and aging cartilages, and in chondrocytes subjected to inflammatory cytokine treatment and biomechanical compression injury, and performed translational studies of AMPK pharmacologic activation.

Methods

We assessed activity (phosphorylation) of LKB1 and AMPKα in mouse knee OA cartilage, in aging mouse cartilage (6 to 24 months), and in chondrocytes after mechanical injury by dynamic compression, via immunohistochemistry or western blot. We knocked down LKB1 by siRNA transfection. Nitric oxide, matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-3, and MMP-13 release were measured by Griess reaction and ELISA, respectively.

Results

Knockdown of LKB1 attenuated chondrocyte AMPK activity, and increased nitric oxide, MMP-3 and MMP-13 release (P <0.05) in response to IL-1β and TNFα. Both LKB1 and AMPK activity were decreased in mouse knee OA and aged knee cartilage, and in bovine chondrocytes after biomechanical injury. Pretreatment of bovine chondrocytes with AMPK activators AICAR and A-769662 inhibited both AMPKα dephosphorylation and catabolic responses after biomechanical injury.

Conclusion

LKB1 is required for chondrocyte AMPK activity, thereby inhibiting matrix catabolic responses to inflammatory cytokines. Concurrent loss of LKB1 and AMPK activity in articular chondrocytes is associated with OA, aging and biomechanical injury. Conversely, pharmacologic AMPK activation attenuates catabolic responses to biomechanical injury, suggesting a potentially novel approach to inhibit OA development and progression.  相似文献   

20.
MicroRNA-145 has been shown to regulate chondrocyte homeostasis. It seems that miR-145 is implicated in cartilage dysfunction in Osteoarthritis (OA). However, the functional role of miR-145 in interleukin-1 beta (IL-1β)-induced extracellular matrix (ECM) degradation of OA cartilage has never been clarified. Here, we show that miR-145 expression increased in OA chondrocytes and in response to IL-1β stimulation. We confirm that mothers against decapentaplegic homolog 3 (Smad3), a key factor in maintaining chondrocyte homeostasis, is directly regulated by miR-145. Modulation of miR-145 affects the expression of Smad3 causing a change of its downstream target gene expression as well as IL-1β-induced ECM degradation in OA chondrocytes. This indicates that miR-145 contributes to impaired ECM in OA cartilage probably in part via targeting Smad3.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号