Abstract

The lateral resolution of infrared spectroscopy has been inadequate for accurate biochemical characterization of the cell microenvironment, a region regulating biochemical and biomechanical signals to cells. In this study, we demonstrate the capacity of a high-resolution Fourier transform infrared microspectroscopy (HR-FTIR-MS) to characterize the collagen content of this region. Specifically, we focus on the collagen content in the cartilage cell (chondrocyte) microenvironment of healthy and osteoarthritic (OA) cartilage. Human tibial cartilage samples (N = 28) were harvested from 7 cadaveric donors and graded for OA severity (healthy, early OA, advanced OA). HR-FTIR-MS was used to analyze the collagen content of the chondrocyte microenvironment of five distinct zones across the tissue depth. HR-FTIR-MS successfully showed collagen content distribution across chondrocytes and their environment. In zones 2 and 3 (10 - 50% of the tissue thickness), we observed that collagen content was smaller (P < 0.05) in early OA compared to the healthy tissue in the vicinity of cells (pericellular region). The collagen content loss was extended to the extracellular matrix in advanced OA tissue. No significant differences in the collagen content of the chondrocyte microenvironment were observed between the groups in the most superficial (0–10%) and deep zones (50–100%). HR-FTIR-MS revealed collagen loss in the early OA cartilage pericellular region before detectable changes in the extracellular matrix in advanced OA. HR-FTIR-MS-based compositional assessment enables a better understanding of OA-related changes in tissues. This technique can be used to identify new disease mechanisms enabling better intervention strategies. Statement of significanceOsteoarthritis (OA) is the most common degenerative joint disease causing pain and disability. While significant progress has been made in OA research, OA pathogenesis is still poorly understood and current OA treatments are mainly palliative. This study demonstrates that high-resolution FTIR microspectroscopy (HR-FTIR-MS) can characterize OA-induced compositional changes in the cell microenvironment (pericellular matrix) during the early disease stages before tissue changes in the extracellular matrix become apparent. This technique may further enable the identification of new OA mechanisms and improve our current understanding of OA pathogenesis, thus, enabling the development of better treatment methods.

Highlights

  • Osteoarthritis (OA) is a degenerative joint disease affecting the whole joint

  • A similar reduction was observed in zone 3, in which significantly lower collagen content was observed in the estimated pericellular matrix (PCM) in the early OA group compared to the healthy group

  • We demonstrated the capacity of HR-Fourier transform infrared microspectroscopy (FTIR-MS) to evaluate biochemical changes in the human cartilage cellular microenvironment at different stages of OA, in the collagen content

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Summary

Introduction

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a degenerative joint disease affecting the whole joint. The disease is characterized by erosion of articular cartilage and loss of the extracellular matrix (ECM) solid components (collagen and proteoglycan (PG)) [1]. A very recent mice cartilage study showed that the PCM stiffness seems to be reduced first before any changes are observed in the ECM at the very early phases of (post-traumatic) OA [13]. This observation may reflect subtle changes in the biochemical composition. Collagen homeostasis is presumably disrupted during disease progression as both human and canine studies have reported an increase in collagen VI expressions within the PCM in moderate OA cartilage tissue [15,16]. It is unknown when and where the earliest disruptions occur

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