Abstract

BackgroundOsteoarthritis (OA) is a progressive, chronic disease characterized by articular cartilage destruction. The pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-17 levels have been reported elevated in serum and synovial fluid of OA patients and correlated with increased cartilage defects and bone remodeling. The aim of this study was to characterize an IL-17-mediated articular cartilage degradation ex-vivo model and to investigate IL-17 effect on cartilage extracellular matrix protein turnover.MethodsFull-depth bovine femoral condyle articular cartilage explants were cultured in serum-free medium for three weeks in the absence, or presence of cytokines: IL-17A (100 ng/ml or 25 ng/ml), or 10 ng OSM combined with 20 ng/ml TNFα (O + T). RNA isolation and PCR analysis were performed on tissue lysates to confirm IL-17 receptor expression. GAG and ECM-turnover biomarker release into conditioned media was assessed with dimethyl methylene blue and ELISA assays, respectively. Gelatin zymography was used for matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) 2 and MMP9 activity assessment in conditioned media, and shotgun LC-MS/MS for identification and label-free quantification of proteins and protein fragments in conditioned media. Western blotting was used to validate MS results.ResultsIL-17RA mRNA was expressed in bovine full-depth articular cartilage and the treatment with IL-17A did not interfere with metabolic activity of the model. IL-17A induced cartilage breakdown; conditioned media GAG levels were 3.6-fold-elevated compared to untreated. IL-17A [100 ng/ml] induced ADAMTS-mediated aggrecan degradation fragment release (14-fold increase compared to untreated) and MMP-mediated type II collagen fragment release (6-fold-change compared to untreated). MS data analysis revealed 16 differentially expressed proteins in IL-17A conditioned media compared to untreated, and CHI3L1 upregulation in conditioned media in response to IL-17 was confirmed by Western blotting.ConclusionsWe showed that IL-17A has cartilage modulating potential. It induces collagen and aggrecan degradation indicating an upregulation of MMPs. This was confirmed by zymography and mass spectrometry data. We also showed that the expression of other cytokines is induced by IL-17A, which provide further insight to the pathways that are active in response to IL-17A. This exploratory study confirms that IL-17A may play a role in cartilage pathology and that the applied model may be a good tool to further investigate it.

Highlights

  • Osteoarthritis (OA) is a progressive, chronic disease characterized by articular cartilage destruction

  • IL-17 receptor mRNA is expressed in bovine full-depth articular cartilage In order to confirm that our model system can respond to IL-17 stimulus, IL-17A receptor expression was verified in freshly harvested full-depth bovine stifle joint articular cartilage tissue biopsies by PCR and 2% agarose gel electrophoresis

  • Treatment with IL-17A does not interfere with the metabolic activity of the model to verify that our explant system remains viable throughout the three-week tissue culture period and, that any observed changes to protein release into conditioned media are not due to tissue death, the metabolic activity of explants was assessed every 7th day of the culture period using a commercial resazurin-based metabolic assay

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Summary

Introduction

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a progressive, chronic disease characterized by articular cartilage destruction. Articular cartilage – an aneural, avascular and alymphatic connective tissue that can withstand compressive load – provides a low friction gliding surface, facilitating synovial joint articulation [1, 2] It is composed of chondrocytes (1–5% of the cartilage tissue volume) and a dense extracellular matrix (ECM), which primarily consists of water (up to 80% of wet cartilage weight), proteoglycans and collagens [1]. Osteoarthritis (OA) is a degenerative joint disease, characterized by progressive articular cartilage destruction, subchondral bone remodeling and occasional synovial inflammation [3] It is the most common joint disease worldwide and one of the most frequent health problems experienced by middle aged and older people [3, 4]. Gender, age, genetics, diet, joint injury, abnormal joint loading and joint malalignment are risk factors for OA [3, 7]

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