Abstract
Early changes within articular cartilage during human idiopathic osteoarthritis are poorly understood. However alterations to chondrocyte morphology occur with the development of fine cytoplasmic processes and cell clusters, potentially playing a role in cartilage degeneration. The aggrecanase ADAMTS-4 (A disintegrin and metalloproteinase with thrombospondin motifs-4) has been implicated as an important factor in cartilage degradation, so we investigated the relationship between chondrocyte morphology and levels of ADAMTS-4 in both non-degenerate and mildly osteoarthritic human cartilage.Human femoral heads were obtained following consent from patients undergoing hip arthroplasty following femoral neck fracture. Cartilage explants of normal (grade 0; G0) and mildly osteoarthritic (grade 1; G1) cartilage were labelled with the cytoplasmic dye CMFDA (5-chloromethylfluorescein-diacetate). Explants were cryosectioned (30μm sections), and labelled for ADAMTS-4 by fluorescence immunohistochemistry. Sections were imaged with confocal microscopy, allowing the semi-quantitative analysis of ADAMTS-4 and 3D visualisation of in situ cell morphology.With cartilage degeneration from G0 to G1, there was a decrease in the proportion of chondrocytes with normal rounded morphology (P<0.001) but an increase in the proportion of cells with processes (P<0.01) and those in clusters (P<0.001;[4(1653)]; femoral heads:cells). Although average levels of ADAMTS-4 for all cells was the same between G0 and G1 (P>0.05), a change was evident in the distribution curves for cell-specific ADAMTS-4 labelling. Cell-by-cell analysis showed that ADAMTS-4 levels were higher in chondrocytes with cytoplasmic processes compared to normal cells (P=0.044) however cells in clusters had lower levels than normal cells (P=0.003;[3(436)]). Preliminary data suggested that ADAMTS-4 levels increased with larger chondrocyte clusters.These results suggest complex heterogeneous changes to levels of cell-associated ADAMTS-4 with early cartilage degeneration – increasing in cells with processes and initially decreasing in clusters. Increased levels of ADAMTS-4 are likely to produce focal areas of matrix weakness potentially leading to early cartilage degeneration.
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