Familial osteochondritis dissecans (FOCD) is an inherited defect of cartilage and bone characterized by development of large cartilage lesions in multiple joints, short stature and early onset osteoarthritis. We have studied a family from Northern Sweden with FOCD over five generations. All affected family members have a heterozygous missense mutation on exon 17 of the aggrecan gene, resulting in a Val-Met amino acid replacement in the G3 aggrecan C-type lectin domain (CLD). Aggrecan, a major proteoglycan of articular cartilage produced by chondrocytes, has a large protein core richly substituted with sulfated glycosaminoglycan chains. The unique structure, its high concentration within the cartilage extracellular matrix and its ability to form a supermolecular complex with hyaluronan and bind to other matrix proteins all profoundly influence the biomechanical properties of the tissue. Deletion of CLD in a chick aggrecan construct was found to influence its secretion from chondrocytes and human aggrecan constructs carrying the V2303M mutation showed diminished interactions with the ECM proteins tenascin-R, fibulin-1 and fibulin-2. To investigate the pathogenesis of FOCD, we studied chondrogenic differentiation of patient bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells and induced pluripotent stem cells. We demonstrated that the mutation results in accumulation of unfolded or misfolded aggrecan within the lumen of the chondrocyte endoplasmic reticulum. Associated with this is the failure to assemble a normal extracellular matrix. This explains the susceptibility of these patients to cartilage injury and the degenerative changes that lead to early onset osteoarthritis.
Human synovium harbours macrophages and T-cells that secrete inflammatory cytokines, stimulating chondrocytes to release proteinases like aggrecanases and matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) during the development of Osteoarthritis (OA). Inflammation of the synovium is a key feature of OA, linked to several clinical symptoms and the disease progression. As a prelude to testing in an OA mouse model, we have used the tetracycline system (Tet) to modify mouse mesenchymal stem cells (mMSCs) to over-express viral interleukin 10 (vIL10), an anti-inflammatory cytokine, to modulate the osteoarthritic environment and prevent disease development. MSCs isolated from the marrow of C57BL/6J mice expressed CD90.2, SCA-1, CD105, CD140a, and were negative for CD34, CD45 and CD11b by flow cytometry. Adenoviral transduction of MSCs carrying CMVIL10 and TetON as test, and untransduced, AdNull and TetOFF as negative controls was successful and tightly controlled vIL10 production was demonstrated by CMVIL10 and TetON MSCs using a vIL10 ELISA kit. Co-incubation of vIL10MSC CM with lipopolysaccharide activated bone-marrow derived murine macrophages (BMDMs) resulted in reduction of TNF-α, IL-6 levels and elevated production of IL-10 by ELISA and high iNOS release by Griess assay. Co-culture of active macrophages with TetON MSCs, resulted in polarisation of macrophage cell population from M1 to M2 phase, with decrease in pro-inflammatory MHC-II (M1 marker) and increase in regulatory CD206 (M2 marker) expression over time. The PCR profiler array on MSC CM treated BMDMs, also showed changes in gene expression of critical pro-inflammatory cytokines and receptors involved in the TLR4 pathway. The biscistronic TetON transduced MSCs proved to be most immuno-suppressive and therefore feasible as efficient anti-inflammatory therapy that can utilised
Synovitis has been shown to play a role in pathophysiology of OA promoting cartilage destruction and pain. Synovium is mainly composed of synovial fibroblast (SF) and macrophage (SM) that guide synovial inflammation. Adipose stromal cells (ASC) promising candidate for cell therapy in OA are able to counteract inflammation. Two different subsets of macrophages have been described showing a pro-inflammatory (M1) and an anti-inflammatory (M2) phenotype. Macrophage markers: CD68, CD80 (M1-like) and CD206 (M2-like) were evaluated in osteoarthritic synovial tissue. GMP-clinical grade ASC were isolated from subcutaneous adipose tissue and M1-macrophages were differentiated from CD14+ obtained from peripheral blood of healthy donors. ASC were co-cultured in direct and indirect contact with activated (GM-CSF+IFNγ)-M1 macrophages for 48h. At the end of this co-culture we analyzed IL1β, TNFα, IL6, MIP1α/CCL3, S100A8, S100A9, IL10, CD163 and CD206 by qRT-PCR or immunoassay. PGE2 blocking experiments were performed. In moderate grade OA synovium we found similar percentages of CD80 and CD206. M1-activated macrophage factors IL1β, TNFα, IL6, MIP1α/CCL3, S100A8 and S100A9 were down-modulated both co-culture conditions. Moreover, ASC induced the typical M2 macrophage markers IL10, CD163 and CD206. Blocking experiments showed that TNFα, IL6, IL10, CD163 and CD206 were significantly modulated by PGE2. We confirmed the involvement of PGE2/COX2 also in CD14+ OA synovial macrophages. In conclusion we demonstrated that ASC are responsible for the switching of activated-M1-like to a M2-like anti-inflammatory phenotype, mainly through PGE2. This suggested a specific role of ASC as important determinants in therapeutic dampening of synovial inflammation in OA.
Osteoarthritis (OA) is a degenerative disease with a strong inflammatory component. Intra-articular (IA) injections of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) modulate local inflammation, although the lack of engraftment suggests that they undergo apoptosis. The aim of this study is to investigate the fate of IA-delivered MSCs in an animal model of OA and to assess the role of apoptosis
Human mesenchymal stem cells are considered the golden standard for clinical application in regenerative medicine for their multilineage differentiation potential, best candidates to treat diseases such as osteoarthritis and osteogenesis imperfecta. In the past few years several molecules have been described to induce the hMSCs differentiation into osteo cell progenitors, mainly discovered by screening of single metabolites bioactivity. However, hMSCs osteogenic differentiation potential is still poor, and the discovery of differentiation inducers with high efficiency is needed. Thanks to automated processes, High Throughput Screening (HTS) strategies shorten the metabolites bioactivity investigation timeline, allowing testing of many molecules simultaneously. In this work, reliable assays for natural products bioactivity investigation detection were developed using HTS methodologies and validated by testing 15 purified compounds derived by marine fungi and sponges. The HTS cytotoxicity investigation using HepG2 cells allowed to test in a single experiment, 15 metabolites in 4 concentrations ranging from 1 to 20µM. Low cytotoxicity was detected for metabolites concentrations from 1 to 10µM and so set as treatment concentrations to be tested in further assays. Anti-inflammatory bioactivity was tested on THP1 cells triggered by LPS. Five out of 15 metabolites showed to prevent the LPS induced THP1 inflammatory activation by lowering the TNF-α production. The metabolites pro-osteogenic potential was investigated using hMSCs: their differentiation was evaluated by calcium mineralization after 10 days differentiation. Pro-osteogenic molecules were not detected in this screening, but the method validation represents a powerful tool for future natural product and synthetic molecules libraries screenings.
Inflammation has been associated with early degradative changes in articular cartilage and immune responses are key factor influencing normal tissue regeneration and repair. With synovitis a prominent feature in osteoarthritis (OA) and associated with the progressive degradation of articular cartilage, immune factors need to be factored into efforts to achieve efficient cartilage repair/regeneration. Recent efforts have focused on the use of autologous or allogeneic mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs) to modulate the inflammatory environment in the injured or osteoarthritic joint. Intraarticular injection of MSCS has modulated cartilage degradation in a variety of pre-clinical OA models. Results from early clinical trials have also shown effects on pain and function-associated outcome measures. Other cell types may also have some capacity for use as a therapy for OA. For example, primary allogeneic chondrocytes also seem to have some immune-privilege in the synovial joint and are immunomodulatory in a rat model. Although MSCs isolated from bone marrow that are induced to undergo chondrogenic differentiation do not retain these properties, MSCs isolated from the synovium or chondroprogenitors generated from cartilage itself may represent the future of cell therapy for OA.
Osteoarthritis (OA) is a debilitating joint disease that severely affects elderly populations. At present there are no effective treatments for OA and mechanisms of disease progression are poorly understood. Previous work has identified that neuronal-Interleukin-16 (nIL-16) was significantly up-regulated in cartilage during the later stages of OA. Preliminary investigations identified co-localisation of nIL-16 with the Transient Receptor Potential cation ion-channel sub-Family-V-member-4 (TRPV4) in the primary cilium and the pericellular matrix of human OA chondrocytes. Perturbation of both TRPV4 and cilia are strongly associated with OA. We hypothesised that nIL-16 and TRPV4 work in tandem in a pathway that leads to chondrocyte hypertrophy and calcification that is seen in late OA and contributes to the loss of joint integrity. This makes it a promising target for development of a gene therapy to combat the disease. With the aim of elucidating the mechanism involved, nIl-16 knock-out cell lines generated using the Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeat (CRISPR)/Cas9 system will be used to knock out nIl-16 PDZ domains to investigate whether this is the mechanism in which nIL-16 functions to anchor TRPV4 to the membrane of chondrocytes at the primary cilium. This work will be carried out using an immortalized hTERT mesenchymal stromal cell (MSC) cell line and effects on terminal MSC chondrogenesis, where hypertrophy mimics the process of calcification seen in OA, will be used to define functional effects of the knockout. Cell lines will be made using the RALA peptide (Phion Therapeutics), a bioinspired nanoparticle, for delivery the CRISPR/Cas9 system.