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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 133 - 133
1 Nov 2021
Mullen M Bahney CS Huard J Ehrhart N
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Introduction and Objective. Exosomal miRNA have been shown to regulate many myogenic and osteogenic pathways involved in injury repair and healing. It is also known that rehabilitation and exercise can improve muscle mass and bone growth. The mechanisms by which this occurs in vivo are well studied, but the impact exosomes and their associated miRNA cargo have is unclear. With this knowledge and question in mind, we hypothesized that C2C12 myoblasts subjected to in vitro mechanical stimulus (“exercise”) would exhibit improved exosome production and differentially expressed miRNA cargo when compared to their static (“unexercised”) counterparts. Materials and Methods. C2C12 myoblasts were cultured using the FlexCell FX-5000TT bioreactor. Two exercise regimens were programmed: 1) low intensity regimen (LIR) (0–15% strain at 0.5 Hz for 24 hours) 2) high intensity interval regimen (HIIR) (12–22% strain at 1 Hz for 10 minutes followed by 50 minutes of rest repeated for 24 hours). Unexercised (static) cells were cultured in parallel. Exosomes were isolated using the Invitrogen Total Exosome Isolation Reagent. The Pierce BCA Protein Assay, System Bioscience's ExoELISA-ULTRA CD81 Kit and, SBI's ExoFlow-ONE EV labeling kit were used to confirm and quantify exosome number and protein concentration. The SBI Exo-NGS service was used to perform miRNA sequencing on isolated exosomes. Results. All exercise regimens resulted in increased exosome concentrations as determined by CD81 exosome ELISA and flow-cytometry based exosome quantification. The LIR interestingly produced significantly more exosomes than static and HIIR. Within the exosomes from mechanically stimulated cells, 35 miRNAs were found to be differentially expressed when compared to exosomes from unexercised cells. Interestingly, this significance was only found within exosomes from the HIIR group. Specifically, upon investigation 8 of these miRNAs were found to be involved in myogenic and osteogenic proliferation and differentiation. These results correlate with our previous findings that exosomes from exercised cells improve the proliferation and myogenic differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts. Conclusions. Our results indicate that exercise can be optimized to improve the production and regenerative capacity of exosomes. These results also indicate that exosomes may be intimately involved in systemic health and repair during rehabilitation and exercise. To examine these results in vivo, mouse studies using a crush injury model and exosomes from mechanically stimulated cells are currently planned


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_3 | Pages 29 - 29
1 Apr 2018
Steinbusch MMF Cremers A van Rhijn LW Welting TJM
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Chondrogenic differentiation and cartilage homeostasis requires a high cellular translational capacity to meet the demands for cartilaginous extracellular matrix production. Box C/D and H/ACA snoRNAs guide post-transcriptional 2′-O ribose methylation and pseudouridylation of specific ribosomal RNA (rRNA) nucleotides, respectively. How specific rRNA modifications influence rRNA function is poorly documented, but modifications are thought to tune rRNA folding and interaction with ribosomal proteins, which is critical for ribosome function. We hypothesise that chondrocyte translational capacity is supported by snoRNA-mediated post-transcriptional fine-tuning of rRNAs. ATDC5 progenitor cells were differentiated into the chondrogenic lineage, resembling mature and mineralising chondrocytes after 7 or 14 days, respectively. UBF-1 (rRNA transcription factor), fibrillarin (box C/D methyltransferase) and dyskerin (box H/ACA pseudouridylase) expression displayed highest fold induction at day 5/6 in differentiation. Ribosomal RNA content per cell was increased at day 7, but not at day 14 in differentiation. These data suggest that ribosome biogenesis adapts to the chondrocyte's differentiation status. RNA-Seq of RNA species <200 nt revealed expression of at least 224 individual snoRNAs. Due to initiation of chondrogenic differentiation (Δt0-t7), 21 snoRNAs were differentially expressed (DE; FDRadj-p<0.05, logFC>1or<−1). Mineralization (Δt7-t14) induced DE of 23 snoRNAs. Comparing t0 with t14 resulted in DE of 43 snoRNAs. To anticipate on the biological relevance of DE snoRNAs, their rRNA target nucleotides were plotted in 18S, 5.8S and 28S rRNA secondary structures. This revealed that DE snoRNAs, amongst others, target nucleotide modifications in the 28S peptidyl transferase center and the 18S decoding center (DC). Snora40 was DE, targeting helix 27/18S rRNA. Helix 27 controls DC function. Helix 68 of 28S rRNA is part of the ribosome's E-site, therefore, DE snord36c and snora31 (targeting helix 68) could potentially fine-tune the translation mechanism. As a final example we found snord46 to be DE (target: helix 69/28S rRNA). Mutations in helix 69 have been shown to severely affect cell viability. Our data show that increased demand for translational capacity during chondrogenic differentiation is associated with differential expression of snoRNAs, potentially controlling ribosome fidelity via site-specific rRNA-modifications. These data enable us to determine the role of individual snoRNAs in tuning the chondrocyte's translational properties and current efforts focus on confirming site-specific rRNA-modifications and determine their biological relevance


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 266 - 266
1 Jul 2014
Zhao L Thambyah A Broom N
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Summary. The presence or absence of crimp within the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) sub-bundle anatomy was correlated with knee flexion angle changes and provided a measure of differential loading within its sub-bundle microstructure. Introduction. Previous studies have shown that macroscopically the anteromedial (AM) and posterolateral (PL) bundles of the ACL tighten/slacken differently with knee flexion angle. This research used fibre crimp morphology, revealed following in situ fixation of the intact ligament structures, to investigate patterns of differential fibre recruitment across each ACL sub-bundle. Methods. Twelve mature ovine knees were divided into four test-groups of three: control, hyper-extension (8°), neutral position (50°), and deep flexion (170°). For the control group, ligament-bone (tibia) samples were isolated and chemically fixed, unconstrained, in 10% formalin. For the flexed groups the whole joints were first positioned in the relevant angle of flexion using a custom-built rig and formalin-fixed in-situ before undergoing dissection. All ligament-bone samples were decalcified using 10% formic acid and cryo-sectioned in the sagittal plane to obtain 20μm serial slices. These were then examined in their fully hydrated state using differential inference contrast (DIC) microscopy. The degree of crimping, taken as an approximate indicator of elongation and thus loading, was classified as either substantial, intermediate or minimal. Crimp coarseness or wavelength, crimp angle and number of visible apices per unit fibre length were measured and analysed statistically using both ANOVA and post hoc analysis (significance, p < 0.05). Results. Control group. Substantial crimping was present in all regions of both AM and PL bundles. However two distinct crimp morphologies were discerned, coarse and fine. Coarse crimp dominated both the small anterior region of the AM bundle proximal to the tibial plateau and the entire PL bundle. Fine crimp was present in the remaining part of the AM bundle. The wavelengths and maximum angles of the coarse and fine crimp were significantly different at 44.8 ± 5.9 µm/45° and 16.2 ± 3.1 μm/15° respectively. This difference in crimp morphology was consistent along the serial sections of the ACL. From the serial sections, a three dimensional interpretation of the degree of crimping was obtained for the three different loading positions. A summary of the main findings is presented as follows: Hyper-extension. A small antero-medial portion of the AM bundle was substantially crimped (indicating an unloaded state) and the remaining region exhibiting only intermediate crimping; the bulk of the PL bundle was largely free of crimp (indicating a relatively loaded state) except for a substantially crimped region in its postero-lateral aspect. Neutral position. The anterior portion of the AM bundle exhibited minimal crimp but elsewhere was intermediate. The entire PL bundle was substantially crimped. Deep flexion. The substantially crimped medial portion of the AM bundle transformed progressively into an intermediate crimp morphology as the lateral aspect of the bundle was approached. Both the postero-medial and antero-lateral aspects of the PL bundle were largely free of crimp whereas the intervening region was intermediately crimped. Conclusion. Through serial sectioning, this study has revealed differential patterns of fibre recruitment, following loading, in all four quadrants of the sub-bundles of the ovine ACL at different knee flexion angles


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 40 - 40
1 Apr 2018
Diederichs S Tonnier V Weisser M Richter W
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To overcome the severely limited regenerative capacity of cartilage, bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) are an attractive cell source that is accessible less invasively and in higher quantity than articular chondrocytes (ACs). However, current in vitro chondrogenic protocols induce MSCs to form transient cartilage reminiscent of growth plate cartilage that becomes hypertrophic and is remodeled into bone. In contrast, under the same conditions, ACs form stable articular-like cartilage. Developmental studies in mice have revealed that TGF-beta/BMP, Wnt, and Hedghog/PTHrP signaling are the major regulators of both, articular cartilage and endochondral bone formation. While the differential regulation of TGF-beta/BMP and Hedgehog/PTHrP in endochondral MSC versus AC chondral differentiation is established knowledge, little is known about Wnt in these cells. Aim of this study was therefore to compare in vitro levels of Wnt network components in MSC-derived endochondral versus AC-derived articular cartilage. Whole genome expression data comparing human MSCs and ACs at days 0 and 28 of in vitro chondrogenesis were screened for differential expression of Wnt ligands, receptors, co-receptors, activators/inhibitors and signaling molecules. Expression of the most strongly differentially regulated Wnt network genes was studied in detail during in vitro chondrogenesis of MSCs vs ACs via qPCR at days 0, 7, 14, 21, 35, and 42. During early chondrogenesis, most Wnt components were expressed at low levels in both MSCs and ACs, with two exceptions. MSCs started into chondrogenesis with significantly higher levels of the non-canonical ligand WNT5A. ACs on the other hand expressed significantly higher levels of the canonical antagonist FRZB on day 0. During advancing and late chondrogenesis, MSCs downregulated WNT5A but still expressed it at significantly higher levels at day 42 than ACs. Strong regulation was also evident for WNT11 and the receptor PTK7 which were both strongly upregulated in MSCs. Unlike MSCs, ACs barely regulated these non-canonical Wnt genes. With regard to canonical signaling, only the transcription factor LEF1 showed strong upregulation in MSCs, while FZD9 and FRZB were only slightly upregulated in late MSC chondrogenesis. Again, these genes remained unregulated in ACs. Our data suggest that a dynamic Wnt network regulation may be a unique characteristic of endochondral MSC differentiation while during AC chondral differentiation Wnt expression remained rather low and stable. Overall, mRNA of the non-canonical Wnt network components were stronger regulated than canonical factors which may indicate that primarily non-canonical signaling is dynamic in endochondral differentiation. Next step is to assess levels of active and total beta-catenin, the canonical Wnt mediator, and to use Wnt antagonists to establish a causal relationship between Wnt signaling and endochondral differentiation


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 287 - 287
1 Jul 2014
Semevolos S Kinsley M Duesterdieck-Zellmer K Riddick T
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Summary Statement. Differential expression of canonical and noncanonical Wnt signalling along cartilage canals and osteochondral junctions is dependent on age. Increased gene expression of PTHrP along cartilage canals and Ihh along osteochondral junctions suggests paracrine feedback in articular-epiphyseal cartilage. Introduction. Wnt signaling has been shown to regulate chondrocyte differentiation during pre-/post-natal cartilage development. In addition, parathyroid-related peptide(PTHrP) and Indian hedgehog(Ihh) create a negative feedback loop in growth cartilage, but less is known in articular cartilage. The objective of this study was to elucidate expression of regulatory molecules in chondrocytes surrounding cartilage canals and osteochondral junctions during neonatal and pre-adolescent development. We hypothesised there would be increased expression of canonical Wnt signalling molecules and Ihh in osteochondral junction chondrocytes compared to cartilage canal chondrocytes. In addition, we hypothesised that Wnt signaling and PTHrP expression would be greater in neonates than pre-adolescents. Patients & Methods. Osteochondral samples were obtained(IACUC-approved) from normal femoropatellar joints of 14 euthanised immature horses(6 neonates, 8 pre-adolescents). Samples were frozen in OCT for laser capture microdissection(LCM) or fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde and paraffin-embedded for immunohistochemistry. Chondrocytes surrounding cartilage canals and osteochondral junctions were captured using LCM. Following RNA isolation, equine-specific β-catenin, Wnt-4, Wnt-5b, Wnt-11, Dickkopf-1(Dkk-1), low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein-4,-6(Lrp4, Lrp6), Axin1, Wnt inhibitory factor-1(WIF)-1, secreted Frizzled-related protein-1,-3,-5(sFRP), retinoic acid receptor gamma(RARG), RAR-inducible serine carboxypeptidase(SC-PEP), Ihh, PTHrP, VEGF, PDGF, MMP-13, and 18S mRNA expression levels were evaluated by two-step real-time qPCR. Following immunohistochemistry using rabbit polyclonal or mouse monoclonal primary antibodies (confirmed by Western blot), spatial tissue protein expression was scored (0–3). Statistical analysis included Wilcoxon signed rank test(paired samples) or rank sum test(unpaired samples)(P<0.05). Results. Gene expression in chondrocytes along cartilage canals was significantly higher for PTHrP, β-catenin, Lrp6, Axin1, sFRP5, RARgamma, and SC-PEP than osteochondral junctions. Conversely, gene expression of Ihh, Wnt4, Wnt11, sFRP3, and VEGF were higher in osteochondral junction chondrocytes than cartilage canals. There was higher protein expression of β-catenin, PDGF, VEGF, and MMP-13 along osteochondral junctions than cartilage canals of pre-adolescents. Neonates had higher gene expression of PTHrP, Wnt-5b, sFRP3, Lrp6, and RARG in cartilage canal chondrocytes than pre-adolescents, while Ihh, Wnt-11, Lrp4, and Dkk1 were significantly higher in pre-adolescents. Immunostaining was higher for β-catenin and Wnt-11 in pre-adolescent osteochondral junction cartilage than neonates. No differences were found between age groups for Wnt-4 immunostaining. Dkk1 protein expression was significantly higher in the middle cartilage layer of pre-adolescents than neonates. Immunostaining was greater for Ihh and PTHrP in the deep cartilage layer of pre-adolescents than neonates. PDGF, VEGF, and MMP13 protein expression was higher in the superficial cartilage layer of pre-adolescents than neonates. Discussion. Wnt/β-catenin and Ihh/PTHrP signaling regulate cartilage differentiation during development and are important in endochondral ossification. This study revealed cell-specific, age-related differences in gene/protein expression of both regulatory pathways. Cells surrounding cartilage canals typically appeared small/rounded compared to larger chondrocytes along osteochondral junctions, likely due to different developmental stages. Higher PTHrP gene expression along cartilage canals and Ihh expression along osteochondral junctions may reflect these stages, suggesting paracrine feedback in articular-epiphyseal cartilage. β-catenin signaling may induce chondrocyte hypertrophy, potentially by enhancing Ihh and MMP-13 expression. Differential expression of canonical(β-catenin, Wnt-4, Lrp4, Lrp6) and noncanonical Wnt signalling(Wnt-5b, Wnt-11) and Wnt inhibitors (Dkk1, Axin1, sFRP3, sFRP5, Wif-1) surrounding cartilage canals and osteochondral junctions provides evidence of age-related interactions during postnatal development


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 72 - 72
1 Jan 2017
Caron M Emans P Cremers A Surtel D van Rhijn L Welting T
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Heterotopic ossi?cation is the abnormal formation of bone in soft tissues and is a frequent complication of hip replacement surgery. Heterotopic ossi?cations are described to develop via endochondral ossification and standard treatment is administration of indomethacin. It is currently unknown how indomethacin influences heterotopic ossi?cation on a molecular level, therefore we aimed to determine whether indomethacin might influence heterotopic ossi?cation via impairing the chondrogenic phase of endochondral ossification. ATDC5, human bone marrow stem cells (hBMSCs) and rabbit periosteal agarose cultures were employed as progenitor cell models; SW1353, human articular chondrocytes and differentiated ATDC5 cells were used as matured chondrocyte cell models. All cells were cultured in the presence of (increasing) concentrations of indomethacin. The action of indomethacin was confirmed by decreased PGE2 levels in all experiments, and was determined by specific PGE2 ELISA. Gene- and protein expression analyses were employed to determine chondrogenic outcome. Progenitor cell models differentiating in the chondrogenic lineage (ATDC5, primary human bone marrow stem cells and ex vivo periosteal agarose cultures) were treated with increasing concentrations of indomethacin and a dose-dependent decrease in gene- and protein expression of chondrogenic and hypertrophic markers as well as decreased glycosaminoglycan content was observed. Even when hypertrophic differentiation was provoked the addition of indomethacin resulted in decreased hypertrophic marker expression. Interestingly, when mature chondrocytes were treated with indomethacin, a clear increase in collagen type 2 expression was observed. Similarly, when ATDC5 cells and bone marrow stem cells were pre-differentiated to obtain a chondrocyte phenotype and indomethacin was added from this time point onwards, low concentrations of indomethacin also resulted in increased chondrogenic differentiation. Indomethacin induces differential effects on in vitro endochondral ossification, depending on the chondrocyte's differentiation stage, with complete inhibition of chondrogenic differentiation as the most pronounced action. This observation may provide a rationale behind the elusive mode of action of indomethacin in the treatment of heterotopic ossifications


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 299 - 299
1 Jul 2014
Daniels J Phillips K Binch A Chiverton N Breakwell L Micheal A Cole A Dunn S Le Maitre C
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Summary. Anabolic and catabolic signalling processes within IVDs display overlapping pathways, however some pathways were identified as selective to catabolic signalling and inhibition of one of these pathways inhibited some of the catabolic factors induced by IL-1 although NFkB inhibition also affected anabolic expression. Degeneration of intervertebral discs (IVDs) is implicated in 40% of low back pain cases. In the normal disc the balance between anabolic and catabolic processes are carefully balanced. During degeneration this balance is lost in favour of catabolic processes which lead to degradation of the IVD, infiltration of blood vessels and nerves and release of cytokines which sensitise nerves to pain. Interleukin 1 (IL-1) is known to be important in the pathogenesis of IVD degeneration, here we investigated the intracellular signalling pathways activated by IL-1 and those activated by an anabolic factor (CDMP-1) to investigate differential pathways. Human nucleus pulposus cells (NP) removed during discetomy for nerve root pain were stimulated with IL-1 or CDMP-1 for 30 minutes. Site-specific phosphorylation of 46 signalling molecules were identified using R&D proteome array. The activation of ERK1/2, p38, c-jun, and IkB were confirmed using cell based ELISAs, in addition pNFκB localisation in stimulated cells was determined using immunohistochemisty. Pre-treatment with inhibitors to p38, and NFkB for 30 minutes, followed by stimulation with IL-1 (10ng/mL) or CDMP-1 (10ng/mL) for 24 hours was investigated to determine effects on anabolic and catabolic factors. In addition localisation of phosphorylated c-jun, p38 and NFkB were investigated within paraffin embedded sections of human IVD to investigate the presence of active pathways in vivo. Twenty intracellular signalling pathways were activated following CDMP-1 treatment and 8 signalling pathways activated by IL-1. Of note key classical IL-1 signalling pathways p38 MAPK, ERK 1/2 and JNK were activated by IL-1, however of these ERK 1/2 particularly was also activated by CDMP-1, whilst p38 and c-jun were only activated by IL-1. IL-1 induced activation of NFkB signalling to a greater extent than CDMP-1, these results were confirmed by the ‘in cell ELISAs’. IVD tissue samples displayed immunopositive staining for phosphorylated c-jun, NFkB and p38. Inhibition of p38 signalling inhibited IL-1 induced MMP 13 expression, but had little effect on the induction of IL-8. However inhibitors of NFkB signalling pathway failed to inhibit the induction of MMP 13 but abrogated the induced IL-6 and IL-8 expression. IL-1 induced a complete aberration of aggrecan expression by NP cells in alginate culture, this effect was partly inhibited by p38 MAPK inhibitor but was completely restored by inhibiting NFkB signalling. However the aggrecan expressed in CDMP-1 treated cells was decreased by inhibiting NFkB but not p38. Here, we have shown that anabolic and catabolic signalling processes within IVDs show a number of overlapping pathways, however a number of differential pathways were identified and inhibition of p38 MAPK and NFkB pathways inhibited a number of catabolic processes investigated which were induced by IL-1. Thus inhibition of signalling pathways could be a novel mechanism of inhibiting catabolic processes which could hold promise to inhibit degeneration at early stages of disease but also create the correct tissue niche to promote regeneration of the disc


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 83-B, Issue 4 | Pages 593 - 597
1 May 2001
Kamikawa K Harada Y Nagata K Moriya H

Sterilisation by gamma irradiation in the presence of air causes free radicals generated in polyethylene (PE) to react with oxygen, which could lead to loss of physical properties and reduction in fatigue strength. Tissue retrieved from failed total hip replacements often has large quantities of particulate PE and most particles associated with peri-implant osteolysis are oxidised. Consequently, an understanding of the cellular responses of oxidised PE particles may lead to clarification of the pathogenesis of osteolysis and aseptic loosening. We have used the agarose system to demonstrate the differential effects of oxidised and non-oxidised PE particles on the release of proinflammatory products such as interleukin-1β (IL-1β), IL-6, and tumour necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) from monocytes/ macrophages (M/M). Oxidised PE particles were shown to stimulate human M/M to phagocytose and to release cytokines. Oxidation may alter the surface chemistry of the particles and enhance the response to specific membrane receptors on macrophages, such as scavenger-type receptors


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 16 - 16
1 Jan 2017
Dexheimer V Aulmann A Gabler J Bomans K Kynast K Omlor G Richter W
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Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSC) are multipotent, self-renewing cells that are an attractive cell source for cartilage regeneration strategies. While articular chondrocytes form stable cartilage-like tissue under chondrogenic in vitro conditions, a still unsolved problem of chondrocyte production from MSC is their endochondrol development leading to the formation of transient instead of stable articular cartilage. In order to identify relevant molecular determinants of chondrocyte redifferentiation versus MSC chondrogenesis and hypertrophy, this study assessed the differential expression of members of the transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) -superfamily, their receptors and antagonists between differentiating MSC and human articular chondrocytes (HAC). Chondrogenesis of human MSC and redifferentiation of HAC was induced in micromass pellet culture. Gene expression of MSC (n=5) and HAC (n=5) was compared using a transcriptome analysis on Illumina platform. Functional regulation of relevant candidate molecules was assessed in independent MSC and HAC populations by qRT-PCR. Smad signalling during chondrogenic differentiation was analysed by immunohistochemistry and Western Blotting. BMP signalling in both populations was modulated by co-treatment with BMP-4/7 or an inhibitor of Smad1/5/9 signalling. Proteoglycan and DNA content, collagen type II and -X deposition, gene expression of chondrogenic and hypertrophic markers as well as alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity were quantitatively assessed at different time points. In HAC, TGF-β receptor 2 and 3 (TGFBR2/3) were up-regulated to significantly higher levels than in MSC. BMP4, expressed during HAC expansion, was suppressed while CHL2 and CHRD levels raised. In MSC, BMP4 and BMP7 were induced while TGFBR2 and TGFBR3 were down-regulated. Staining for pSmad1/5/9 in HAC demonstrated positive cells dispersed throughout the pellets at day 3 and 5 while lower pSmad1/5/9 immunostaining was observed in MSC. In HAC and MSC pellets pSmad staining decreased during chondrogenesis, in line with Western Blot results. Medium supplementation with BMP-4/7 did not improve cartilaginous matrix deposition by MSC but raised ALP-activity. When Smad1/5/9 phosphorylation was blocked in MSC culture by dorsomorphin treatment (day 14–42) COL2A1 and COL10A1 expression decreased significantly and collagen type II and type X deposition were reduced. ALP activity dropped to 12 % of control levels. Inhibition of pSmad1/5/9 signalling was unattractive to shift chondrogenesis of MSC away from endochondral development since it unpaired SOX9 expression and strongly reduced cartilaginous matrix deposition along with hypertrophy. Thus no simple correlation exists between beneficial pSmad2/3 versus unwanted pSmad1/5/9 signalling during MSC chondrogenesis


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 97 - 97
1 Jul 2014
Wen C Wong K Liu C Yan C Lu W Chiu K
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Summary Statement. OA knee with subchondral cyst formation presented differential microstructure and mechanical competence of trabecular bone. This finding sheds light on the pivot role of subchondral cyst in OA bone pathophysiology. Introduction. Subchondral bone cyst (SBC) is a major radiological finding in knee osteoarthritis (OA), together with joint space narrowing, osteophyte and sclerotic bone formation. There is mounting evidence showing that SBC originates in the same region as bone marrow lesions (BMLs). The presence of subchondral bone cyst (SBCs), in conjunction with BMLs, was associated with the severity of pain, and was able to predict tibial cartilage lolume loss and risk of joint replacement surgery in knee OA patient. It is speculated that the presence of SBCs might increase intraosseous pressure of subchondral bone, and trigger active remodeling and high turnover of surrounding trabecular bone. Yet the exact effect of SBC on the structural and mechanical properties trabecular bone, which provides the support to overlying articular cartilage, remains to be elucidated. Therefore, this study aimed to investiate the microstructure and mechanical competence of trabecular bone of knee OA in presence or absence of SBC. Patients & Methods. A total of 20 postmenopausal women (54–87 years old) with the late-stage of primary knee OA were recruited in this study. Tibial plateau specimens were collected during joint replacement surgery. The samples were grouped for comparison according to presence or absences of SBC in micro-CT images. For micro-CT examination, a cylindrical volume of region of interest (VOI) of 10mm in diameter and 1mm in height was used to cover the trabecular bone region surrounding SBC, and then a cubic VOI of 3.5×3.5×3.5mm. 3. was applied in different anatomic locations of tibial plateau, such as medial, intermediate and lateral part, for the analyses of trabecular bone microstructure. Subsequently, two cylinders of subchondral bone specimens were drilled for each sample with micro-CT guidance from lateral portion of cystic wall along the direction of physiological loading of knee joint. The specimens were processed for micro-CT and mechanical testing using MTS 858 Mini Bionix sequentially. Each specimen was compressed in a longitudinal direction at a speed of 1mm/minute; the ultimate strength and modulus of the specimens were generated. Comparisons of microstructure and mechanical properties of trabecular bone were performed between two groups using student t test. The structure-mechanics relationship was also investigated using Pearson correlation. Results. The bone volume fraction (BV/TV, %) was significantly higher in knee OA specimens in presence of SBC (32±7%) in comparison with those in absence of SBC (16±5%, p<0.001). Meanwhile there were more plate-like trabecular bone surrounding SBC (0.78±0.61) than those without SBC (1.81±0.28, p<0.001), which was indicated by structure model index (0∼3). Furthermore, the trend in conversion of rod-like (close to 3) towards plate-like trabeculae was noticed in different locations of knee OA specimens with SBC formation. Trabecular bone around SBC presented higher modulus (73±22MPa) compared with those without SBC (45±29MPa, p=0.034). The stiffer trabecular bone in presence of SBC correlated with its plate-like morphology (r=0.696, p<0.001) as well as bone volume fraction (r=0.578, p=0.004). Conclusion. Presence of SBC was associated with conversion of trabeculae towards plate-like morphology together with the increase of mechanical competence in advanced knee OA


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 89 - 89
1 Mar 2021
Govaerts A Graceffa V Lories R Jonkers I
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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. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XVIII | Pages 10 - 10
1 May 2012
Chaudhury S Holland C Porter D Vollrath F Carr AJ
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Improved understanding of the biomechanics and biology of rotator cuff tendons (RCT) may help reduce high re-rupture rates following repairs, particularly amongst larger tears. This study aims to use novel methods for quantitatively determining differences in the mechanical and thermal properties of intact healthy RCTs compared to torn ‘diseased’ tendons. A common problem in the mechanical testing of small tendon samples is that stress risers at the clamp-tendon interface can obscure measurements. As the shoulder is subject to shear, tension and compression, we developed a novel solution using Dynamic Shear Analysis (DSA), a form of rheology which studies material deformation. As collagen is the main component of RCT, the structure and mechanical properties may be affected by collagen conformational changes. Both dermis and rat tail tendon with increased collagen cross-linking exhibit stronger mechanical properties. Thermal changes detected by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) can help to quantify collagen structural differences in torn RCT, and has been previously used to study muscle, cartilage and vertebral discs. There were 79 tears (mean age 65.2 years), which were classified according to the size of the tear as small, medium, large and massive. Two separate 3mm-sized biopsy samples were taken and subjected to DSA using oscillatory deformation under compression. The storage modulus (G') was calculated and used as an indicator of mechanical integrity. 18 control tendon specimens were obtained from patients aged between 22-89 years (mean age 58.8 years) during shoulder hemiarthroplasties and stabilisations. Additionally 7 normal, 7 small and 7 massive frozen specimens were thermally characterized. 3 samples per patient were heated between 20-80oC in hermetically sealed vessels. Useful thermal parameters were measured such as the melting temperature (TM) which apparently represents breaking of the amide-amide bonds and protein chains mobility, the denaturation temperature (TD) which supposedly corresponds to proteins falling out of solution and the denaturation enthalpy (ΔH) which reflects the relative amount of triple helical structure. Healthy tendons had a significantly higher modulus than torn tendons, indicating that torn tendons are mechanically weaker than normal tendons (p = 0.032). Normal tendons had significantly higher mean shear modulus than tendons with small and massive tears (p<0.01). Overall there was a negative correlation between moduli and severity of tendon tear (r = −0.698, p=0.189). The moduli did not significantly correlate with age, sex, hand dominance, or length of preservation in formalin. Massive RCT tears had significantly higher TM and TD when compared to normal RCT (p < 0.05), unlike small RCT tears. No significant difference was detected between the denaturation enthalpy of the different RCT groups. This case control study has demonstrated that normal RCTs have a significantly higher modulus than torn tendons, indicating that torn tendons have less mechanical integrity. Our study further demonstrated a trend between increasing tear size and decreasing mechanical integrity. This study has also demonstrated differences in some of the thermal properties of normal and torn RCTs. These are likely due to collagen structural changes. A decrease in the denaturation temperature of torn tendons, suggests that the material is intrinsically less stable. Torn tendons with reduced storage modulus and collagen integrity may be less able to withstand mechanical loads following repair. This pilot study provides some preliminary insight into the mechanisms that may contribute to, or represent adaptations to high rates of failure of RCT repairs


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 115 - 115
1 Nov 2018
Müller S Nicholson L Jone E Dickinson A Dalgarno K Wang X
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Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) are widely used in clinical trials for the treatment of many bone defects. Apatite-wollastonite glass ceramic (A-W) is an osteoconductive biomaterial shown to be compatible with MSCs. This is the first study comparing the osteogenic potential of two MSC populations, heterogeneous plastic adherence MSCs (PA-MSCs) and CD271-enriched MSCs (CD271-MSCs), when cultured on A-W 3D scaffold. The paired MSC populations were assessed for their attachment, growth kinetics and ALP activity using confocal or scanning electron microscopy and the quantifications of DNA contents and p-nitrophenyl (pNP) production. While the PA-MSCs and CD271-MSCs had similar expansion and tri-lineage differentiation capacity during standard 2D culture, they showed different proliferation kinetics when seeded on the A-W scaffolds. PA-MSCs displayed a well-spread attachment with more elongated morphology compared to CD271-MSCs, signifying a different level of interaction between the cell populations and the scaffold surface. PA-MSCs also fully integrated into the scaffold surface and showed a stronger propensity for osteogenic differentiation on the A-W scaffold as indicated by higher ALP activity than CD271-MSCs. Furthermore, A-W scaffold seeded uncultured bone marrow mononuclear cells (BM-MNCs) demonstrated a higher proliferation rate and greater ALP activity compared to freshly isolated CD271-enriched BM-MNCs. Our findings suggest that enrichment of CD271-positive population is not beneficial for osteogenesis when the cells are seeded on A-W scaffold. Furthermore, unselected heterogeneous MSCs or BM-MNCs are more promising for A-W scaffold-based bone regeneration, providing novel insight with potential clinical implications in regenerative medicine for bone defects using an innovative tissue engineering approach.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 55 - 55
1 Nov 2018
Moeller K Gottardi R Tellado SF Tuan R van Griensven M Balmayor ER
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After surgical tendon repair, the tendon-to-bone enthesis often doesn't regenerate, which leads to high numbers of rupture recurrences. To remedy this, tissue engineering techniques are being pursued to strengthen the interface and improve regeneration. In this study, we used biphasic 3D printed PLGA scaffolds with aligned pores at the tendon side and random pores at the bone side to mimic the native enthesis. We seeded these with mesenchymal stem cells and inserted them into dual-flow bioreactors, allowing us to employ tenogenic and chondrogenic differentiation medium in separate flows. MTS assay demonstrated metabolism in dual-flow bioreactors at levels similar to tissue culture plate and rotating bioreactors. After 7, 14 and 21 days, samples were collected and analyzed by histology, RT-PCR and GAG production. H&E staining confirmed a compact cell layer attached to fibers and between porous cavities of scaffolds that increased with time of culture. Interestingly, cultured constructs in dual-flow bioreactors biased towards a chondrogenic fate regardless of which flow they were exposed to, possibly due to high porosity of the scaffold allowing for fluid mixture. Sox9 was upregulated at all timepoints (up to 30× compared to control), and by day 21 Col2A1 was also highly upregulated. Additionally, GAG production in treated constructs (serum-free) was able to match constructs exposed to 10% FBS in controls, demonstrating the functional matrix forming capabilities of this system. Overall, we have validated this dual-flow system as a potential platform to form the enthesis, and future studies will further optimize parameters to achieve distinctly biphasic constructs.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 64 - 64
1 Jul 2014
Lopa S Colombini A Stanco D de Girolamo L Sansone V Moretti M
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Summary

The donor-matched comparison between mesenchymal stem cells from knee infrapatellar and subcutaneous adipose tissue revealed their preferential commitment towards the chondrogenic and osteogenic lineage, respectively. These peculiarities could be relevant for the development of successful bone and cartilage cell-based applications.

Introduction

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have been proposed in bone and cartilage tissue engineering applications as an alternative to terminally differentiated cells. In the present study we characterised and performed a donor-matched comparison between MSCs resident within the infrapatellar fat pad (IFP-MSCs) and the knee subcutaneous adipose tissue (ASCs) of osteoarthritic patients. These two fat depots, indeed, can be considered appealing candidates for orthopaedic cell-based therapies since they are highly accessible during knee surgery.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 25 - 25
2 Jan 2024
Saldaña L Vilaboa N García-Rey E
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The pathophysiological basis of alterations in trabecular bone of patients with osteonecrosis of the femoral head (ONFH) remains unclear. ONFH has classically been considered a vascular disease with secondary changes in the subchondral bone. However, there is increasing evidence suggesting that ONFH could be a bone disease, since alterations in the functionality of bone tissue distant from the necrotic lesion have been observed. We comparatively studied the transcriptomic profile of trabecular bone obtained from the intertrochanteric region of patients with ONFH without an obvious aetiological factor, and patients with osteoarthritis (OA) undergoing total hip replacement in our Institution. To explore the biological processes that could be affected by ONFH, we compared the transcriptomic profile of trabecular bone from the intertrochanteric region and the femoral head of patients affected by this condition. Differential gene expression was studied using an Affymetrix microarray platform. Transcriptome analysis showed a differential signature in trabecular bone from the intertrochanteric region between patients with ONFH and those with OA. The gene ontology analyses of the genes overexpressed in bone tissue of patients with ONFH revealed a range of enriched biological processes related to cell adhesion and migration and angiogenesis. In contrast, most downregulated transcripts were involved in cell division. Trabecular bone in the intertrochanteric region and in the femoral head also exhibited a differential expression profile. Among the genes differentially expressed, we highlighted those related with cytokine production and immune response. This study identified a set of differently expressed genes in trabecular bone of patients with idiopathic ONFH, which might underlie the pathophysiology of this condition. Acknowledgements: This work was supported by grants PI18/00643 and PI22/00939 from ISCIII-FEDER, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (MICINN)-AES


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 113 - 113
14 Nov 2024
Giger N Schröder M Arens D Gens L Zeiter S Stoddart M Wehrle E
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Background. The molecular mechanisms underlying non-union bone fractures largely remain elusive. Recently, spatial transcriptomics approaches for musculoskeletal tissue samples have been developed requiring direct placement of histology sections on barcoded slides. However, Formalin-Fixed-Paraffin-Embedded (FFPE) bone sections have been associated with limited RNA quality and read depth compared to soft tissue. Here, we test spatial transcriptomics workflows based on transcriptomic probe transfer to characterize molecular features discriminating non-union and union bone fractures in mice. Method. Histological sections (n=8) used for spatial transcriptomics (Visium CytAssist FFPE; 10x Genomics, n=4 on glass slides, n=4 on hydrogel-coated slides) were obtained from a fracture healing study in female 20-week-old C57BL/6J mice receiving either a femur osteotomy (0.7mm) or a segmental defect (2.4mm) (license 22/2022, Grisons CH). Sequence alignment and manual segmentation of different tissues (bone, defect region/callus, bone marrow, muscle) were performed using SpaceRanger and LoupeBrowser (10x Genomics). Differential gene expression was performed using DESeq2 (Seurat) followed by Gene-Set-Enrichment-Analysis (GSEA) of Gene Ontology (ClusterProfiler). Group comparison of quality measures was done using a Welch's t-test. Results are given as mean±standard deviation. Result. The quality measures, mean counts, and genes per spot, were significantly ~10× higher for sections on hydrogel slides (counts: 4700±1796, genes: 2389±1170) compared to glass slides (counts: 463±415, genes: 250±223). In challenging tissues like cortical bone, we reached high counts+genes in comparison to published data. Direct comparison of a non-union and union section showed a total of 432 differentially regulated genes, 538 in the defect region/callus. GSEA revealed differential regulation of pathways involved in muscle organ morphogenesis, cartilage development and endochondral ossification. Conclusions. Optimized spatial transcriptomics workflows based on transcriptomic probe transfer enable for improved read depth in musculoskeletal tissue enabling the characterization of molecular features discriminating non-union and union bone fractures. Acknowledgements. AO Foundation (AOTRAUMA), SNSF (PhD salary)


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 53 - 53
17 Nov 2023
Wright K McDonald J Mennan C Perry J Peffers M Hulme C
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Abstract. Objectives. A promising therapy for early osteoarthritis (OA) is the transplantation of human umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (hUC-MSCs). The synovial fluid (SF) from a pre-clinical ovine model treated with hUC-MSCs has been profiled using proteomics and bioinformatics to elucidate potential mechanisms of therapeutic effect. Methods. Four weeks after a medial meniscus transection surgery, sheep were injected with 10. 7. hUC-MSCs in Phosphate Buffered Saline (PBS) or PBS only (n=7) and sacrificed at 12 weeks. SF was normalised for protein abundance (ProteoMiner. TM. ) and analysed using label-free quantitation proteomics. Bioinformatics analyses (Ingenuity Pathway Analysis (IPA) and STRING) were used to assess differentially regulated functions from the proteomic data. Human orthologues were identified for the ovine proteins using UniProt and DAVID resources and proteins that were ≥±1.3 fold differentially abundant between treatment groups, were included in the bioinformatics analyses. Results. hUC-MSC treated animals demonstrated significantly less joint space narrowing. Nineteen SF proteins were differentially abundant in treated cf. control sheep (FC±2.0; p<0.05). Biglycan (a small leucine-rich proteoglycan of the cartilage extracellular matrix) abundance was increased by 2.1 fold in treated compared to untreated sheep (p=0.024). IPA indicated that lipid synthesis (z-score=1.772; p=0.00267) and immune cell migration pathways (cell movement of mononuclear leukocytes: z-score=1.761; p=0.00259), amongst others, were likely to be activated in the treated sheep. Conversely, tissue damage (z-score=−2; p=0.00019), senescence (z-score=−1.981; p=0.00007) and necrosis (z-score=−1.728; p=0.00829) associated pathways as well as inflammation (z-score=−1.718; p=0.00057) and vascular permeability (z-score=−1.698; p=0.00002) were likely to be inhibited in treated cf. untreated sheep. Conclusions. hUC-MSC treatment prevented/delayed OA progression, demonstrated via a reduction in joint space narrowing. SF proteome bioinformatics revealed potential mechanisms of therapeutic action related to immunomodulation and the inhibition of multiple cell death, and tissue damage associated pathways. Further, a potential predicted upregulation in lipid synthesis in treated sheep represents a novel mechanism warranting further investigation. Additional work is required to validate these discovery phase proteomic findings in studies which specifically target and manipulate the proposed mechanisms highlighted. Declaration of Interest. (b) declare that there is no conflict of interest that could be perceived as prejudicing the impartiality of the research reported:I declare that there is no conflict of interest that could be perceived as prejudicing the impartiality of the research project


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 76 - 76
17 Apr 2023
Hulme C Roberts S Gallagher P Jermin P Wright K
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Stratification is required to ensure that only those patients likely to benefit, receive Autologous Chondrocyte Implantation (ACI); ideally by assessing a biomarker in the blood. This study aimed to assess differences in the plasma proteome of individuals who respond well or poorly to ACI. Isobaric tag for relative and absolute quantitation (ITRAQ) mass spectrometry and label-free proteomics analyses were performed in tandem as described previously by our group (Hulme et al., 2017; 2018; 2021) using plasma collected from ACI responders (n=10) compared with non-responders (n=10) at each stage of surgery (Stage I, cartilage harvest and Stage II, cell implantation). iTRAQ using pooled plasma detected 16 proteins that were differentially abundant at baseline in ACI responders compared with non-responders (n=10) (≥±2.0 fold; p<0.05). Responders demonstrated a mean Lysholm (patient reported functional score from 0–100) improvement of 33±13 and non-responders a mean worsening of −13±13 points. The most pronounced plasma proteome shift was seen in response to Stage I surgery in ACI non-responders, with 48 proteins being differentially abundant between the two surgical procedures. We have previously noted this marked shift in response to initial surgery in the SF of ACI non-responders, several of these proteins were associated with the Acute Phase Response. One of these proteins, clusterin, could be confirmed in patients’ plasma using an independent immunoassay using individual samples. Label-free proteomic data from individual samples identified only cartilage acidic protein-1 (known to associate with osteoarthritis progression) to be significantly more abundant at Stage I in the plasma of non-responders. This study indicates that proteins can be identified within the plasma that have potential use in ACI patient stratification. Further work is required to validate the findings of this discovery-phase work in larger ACI cohorts


In osteoarthritis, chondrocytes acquire a hypertrophic phenotype that contributes to matrix degradation. Inflammation is proposed as trigger for the shift to a hypertrophic phenotype. Using in vitro culture of human chondrocytes and cartilage explants we could not find evidence for a role of inflammatory signalling activation. We found, however, that tissue repair macrophages may contribute to the onset of hypertrophy (doi: 10.1177/19476035211021907) Intra-articularly injected triamcinolone acetonide to inhibit inflammation in a murine model of collagenase-induced osteoarthritis, increased synovial macrophage numbers and osteophytosis, confirming the role of macrophages in chondrocyte hypertrophy occurring in osteophyte formation (doi: 10.1111/bph.15780). In search of targets to inhibit chondrocyte hypertrophy, we combined existing microarray data of different cartilage layers of murine growth plate and murine articular cartilage after induction of collagenase-induced osteoarthritis. We identified common differentially expressed genes and selected those known to be associated to inflammation. This revealed EPHA2, a tyrosine kinase receptor, as a new target. Using in silico, in vitro and in vivo models we demonstrated that inhibition of EPHA2 might be a promising treatment for osteoarthritis. Recently, single cell RNA-seq. has revealed detailed information about different populations of chondrocytes in articular cartilage during osteoarthritis. We re-analysed a published scRNA-seq data set of healthy and osteoarthritic cartilage to obtain the differentially expressed genes in the population of hypertrophic chondrocytes compared to the other chondrocytes, applied pathway analyses and then used drug databases to search for upstream inhibitors of these pathways. This drug repurposing approach led to the selection of 6 drugs that were screened and tested using several in vitro models with human chondrocytes and cartilage explants. In this lecture I will present this sequence of studies to highlight different approaches and models that can be used in the quest for a disease modifying drug for osteoarthritis