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A pathological joint–liver axis mediated by matrikine-activated CD4+ T cells

Authors :
Junzhi Yi
Hui Zhang
Fangyuan Bao
Zhichu Chen
Yuliang Zhong
Tianning Ye
Xuri Chen
Jingyi Qian
Mengya Tian
Min Zhu
Zhi Peng
Zongyou Pan
Jianyou Li
Zihao Hu
Weiliang Shen
Jiaqi Xu
Xianzhu Zhang
Youzhi Cai
Mengjie Wu
Hua Liu
Jing Zhou
Hongwei Ouyang
Source :
Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy, Vol 9, Iss 1, Pp 1-15 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2024.

Abstract

Abstract The knee joint has long been considered a closed system. The pathological effects of joint diseases on distant organs have not been investigated. Herein, our clinical data showed that post-traumatic joint damage, combined with joint bleeding (hemarthrosis), exhibits a worse liver function compared with healthy control. With mouse model, hemarthrosis induces both cartilage degeneration and remote liver damage. Next, we found that hemarthrosis induces the upregulation in ratio and differentiation towards Th17 cells of CD4+ T cells in peripheral blood and spleen. Deletion of CD4+ T cells reverses hemarthrosis-induced liver damage. Degeneration of cartilage matrix induced by hemarthrosis upregulates serological type II collagen (COL II), which activates CD4+ T cells. Systemic application of a COL II antibody blocks the activation. Furthermore, bulk RNAseq and single-cell qPCR analysis revealed that the cartilage Akt pathway is inhibited by blood treatment. Intra-articular application of Akt activator blocks the cartilage degeneration and thus protects against the liver impairment in mouse and pig models. Taken together, our study revealed a pathological joint–liver axis mediated by matrikine-activated CD4+ T cells, which refreshes the organ-crosstalk axis and provides a new treatment target for hemarthrosis-related disease. Intra-articular bleeding induces cartilage degradation through down-reulation of cartilage Akt pathway. During this process, the soluble COL II released from the damaged cartilage can activate peripheral CD4+ T cells, differention into Th17 cells and secretion of IL-17, which consequently induces liver impairment. Intra-articular application of sc79 (inhibitor of Akt pathway) can prevent the cartilage damage as well as its peripheral influences.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20593635
Volume :
9
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4cd22904ee3f49ceae3c123f059f051a
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41392-024-01819-y