Proteolysis and cartilage development are activated in the synovium after surgical induction of post traumatic osteoarthritis. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) transection surgery in the minipig induces post-traumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA) in a pattern similar to that seen in human patients after ACL injury. Prior studies have reported the presence of cartilage matrix-degrading proteases, such as Matrix metalloproteinase-1 (MMP-1) and A disintegrin and metalloproteinase with thrombospondin motifs 4 (ADAMTS-4), in the synovial fluid of injured or arthritic joints; however, the tissue origin of these proteases is unknown. The objective of this study was to identify transcriptional processes activated in the synovium after surgical induction of PTOA with ACL transection, and to determine if processes associated with proteolysis were enriched in the synovium after ACL transection. Unilateral ACL transection was performed in adolescent Yucatan minipigs and synovium samples were collected at 1, 5, 9, and 14 days post-injury. Transcriptome-wide gene expression levels were determined using bulk RNA-Sequencing in the surgical animals and control animals with healthy knees. The greatest number of transcripts with significant changes was observed 1 day after injury. These changes were primarily associated with cellular proliferation, consistent with measurements of increased cellularity of the synovium at the two-week time point. At five to 14 days, the expression of transcripts relating to proteolysis and cartilage development was significantly enriched. While protease inhibitor-encoding transcripts (TIMP2, TIMP3) represented the largest fraction of protease-associated transcripts in the uninjured synovium, protease-encoding transcripts (including MMP1, MMP2, ADAMTS4) predominated after surgery. Cartilage development-associated transcripts that are typically not expressed by synovial cells, such as ACAN and COMP, were enriched in the synovium following ACL-transection. The upregulation in both catabolic processes (proteolysis) and anabolic processes (cartilage development) suggests that the synovium plays a complex, balancing role in the early response to PTOA induction.

authors

  • Ayturk, Ugur
  • Sieker, Jakob T
  • Haslauer, Carla M
  • Proffen, Benedikt L
  • Weissenberger, Manuela H
  • Warman, Matthew L
  • Fleming, Braden C
  • Murray, Martha M

publication date

  • February 27, 2020

Research

keywords

  • Cartilage, Articular
  • Chondrogenesis
  • Osteoarthritis
  • Proteolysis
  • Synovial Membrane
  • Transcriptome

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC7046188

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85080060305

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1371/journal.pone.0229449

PubMed ID

  • 32107493

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 15

issue

  • 2