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TAT-Beclin-1 induces severe synovial hyperplasia and does not protect from injury-induced osteoarthritis in mice.

Authors :
Rockel, J.S.
Wu, B.
Nakamura, S.
Rossomacha, E.
Espin-Garcia, O.
Gandhi, R.
Kapoor, M.
Rockel, Jason S
Wu, Brian
Nakamura, Sayaka
Rossomacha, Evgeny
Espin-Garcia, Osvaldo
Gandhi, Rajiv
Kapoor, Mohit
Source :
Osteoarthritis & Cartilage; Oct2020, Vol. 28 Issue 10, p1394-1400, 7p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

<bold>Object: </bold>Autophagy maintains cartilage homeostasis and is compromised during osteoarthritis (OA), contributing to cartilage degeneration. We sought to determine if D-isomer TAT-Beclin-1, a potent inducer of autophagy, could attenuate post-traumatic OA in mice.<bold>Methods: </bold>10-week-old mice underwent destabilization of the medial meniscus (DMM) surgery to induce post-traumatic OA, or sham surgery (control), and injected intra-articularly with D-isomer TAT-Beclin-1 (0.5-2 mg/kg) or PBS 1 week post-surgery for up to 9 weeks. Mice were sacrificed at 2 or 10 weeks post-surgery. Knee joint sections were evaluated by histopathology for cartilage degeneration and synovitis, and immunostaining for key markers of autophagy (LC3B), cell proliferation (nuclear Ki67), activated fibroblasts (αSMA), and cells of hematopoietic origin (CD45).<bold>Results: </bold>All D-isomer TAT-Beclin-1-treated DMM mice had no difference in the degree of cartilage degeneration compared to PBS-injected DMM mice. Surprisingly, all D-isomer TAT-Beclin-1-treated mice exhibited substantial synovial hyperplasia, with increased cellularity and ECM deposition (fibrosis-like phenotype), as compared to PBS-injected mice. Synovial effects of D-isomer TAT-Beclin-1 were dose- and injection frequency-dependent. An increased percentage of cells positive for LC3B and nuclear Ki67 were found in the synovial intima early after injection, which persisted after frequent injections.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>D-isomer TAT-Beclin-1 did not attenuate cartilage degeneration, but rather induced synovial hyperplasia associated with increased expression of key markers of autophagy and cell proliferation and a fibrosis-like phenotype, independent of markers of fibroblast activation or persistent hematopoietic-origin cell infiltration. These data suggest that, if not tissue-targeted, caution should be taken using autophagy activators due to diverse cellular responses in the joint. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10634584
Volume :
28
Issue :
10
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Osteoarthritis & Cartilage
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
146038847
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joca.2020.07.001