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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 21 - 21
11 Apr 2023
Castro-Viñuelas R Viudes-Sarrión N Monteagudo S Lories R Jonkers I
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Regulation of articular cartilage homeostasis is a complex process in which biologic and mechanical factors are involved. Hyperactivation of Wnt signaling, associated with osteoarthritis (OA), could jeopardize the protective anabolic effect of physiological loading. Here, we investigated the role of excessive Wnt signalling in cartilage molecular responses to loading.

Human cartilage explants were harvested from hips of donors without OA. The Wnt agonist CHIR99021 was used to activate Wnt signalling 24 hours before cartilage explants were subjected to a loading protocol consisting of 2 cycles of 1 hour of 10% compression at 1 Hz, followed by 1-hour free swelling. Mechano-responsiveness was evaluated using the expression of type II collagen, aggrecan and MMP-13. Expression of known target genes TCF-1 and c-JUN was evaluated as positive control for Wnt and mechanical stimulation, respectively.

In the absence of loading, CHIR99021 decreased the expression of the cartilage anabolic genes type II collagen and aggrecan, and increased the levels of MMP-13, corroborating that Wnt hyperactivation disrupts cartilage homeostasis. In the absence of Wnt hyperactivation, the applied loading protocol, representative for a physiologic stimulation by mechanical loading, led to an increase in type II collagen and aggrecan levels. However, when cartilage explants were subjected to mechanical stimulation in the presence of CHIR99021, the expression of cartilage anabolic genes was decreased, indicating changes to the cells’ mechano-responsiveness. Interestingly, mechanical stimulation was able to reduce the expression levels of MMP-13 compared to the condition of CHIR stimulation without loading.

Hyperactivation of Wnt signaling switches the anabolic effect of physiologic compressive loading towards a potential catabolic effect and could contribute to the development and progression of OA.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 8 - 8
11 Apr 2023
Piet J Vancleef S Mielke F Van Nuffel M Orozco G Korhonen R Lories R Aerts P Van Wassenbergh S Jonkers I
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Altered mechanical loading is a widely suggested, but poorly understood potential cause of cartilage degeneration in osteoarthritis. In rodents, osteoarthritis is induced following destabilization of the medial meniscus (DMM). This study estimates knee kinematics and contact forces in rats with DMM to gain better insight into the specific mechanisms underlying disease development in this widely-used model.

Unilateral knee surgery was performed in adult male Sprague-Dawley rats (n=5 with DMM, n=5 with sham surgery). Radio-opaque beads were implanted on their femur and tibia. 8 weeks following knee surgery, rat gait was recorded using the 3D²YMOX setup (Sanctorum et al. 2019, simultaneous acquisition of biplanar XRay videos and ground reaction forces).

10 trials (1 per rat) were calibrated and processed in XMALab (Knörlein et al. 2016). Hindlimb bony landmarks were labeled on the XRay videos using transfer learning (Deeplabcut, Mathis et al. 2019; Laurence-Chasen et al. 2020).

A generic OpenSim musculoskeletal model of the rat hindlimb (Johnson et al. 2008) was adapted to include a 3-degree-of-freedom knee. Inverse kinematics, inverse dynamics, static optimization of muscle forces, and joint reaction analysis were performed.

In rats with DMM, knee adduction was lower compared to sham surgery. Ground reaction forces were less variable with DMM, resulting in less variability in joint external moments. The mediolateral ground reaction force was lower, resulting in lower hip adduction moment, thus less force was produced by the rectus femoris. Rats with DMM tended to break rather than propel, resulting in lower hip flexion moment, thus less force was produced by the semimembranosus. These results are consistent with lower knee contact forces in the anteroposterior and axial directions.

These preliminary data indicate no overloading of the knee joint in rats with DMM, compared with sham surgery. We are currently expanding our workflow to finite element analysis, to examine mechanical cues in the cartilage of these rats (Fig1G).


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 87 - 87
1 Mar 2021
Graceffa V Govaerts A Lories R Jonkers I
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In a healthy joint, mechanical loading increases matrix synthesis and maintains cell phenotype, while reducing catabolic activities. It activates several pathways, most of them yet largely unknown, with integrins, TGF-β, canonical (Erk 1/2) and stress-activated (JNK) MAPK playing a key role. Degenerative joint diseases are characterized by Wnt upregulation and by the presence of proteolytic fibronectin fragments (FB-fs). Despite they are known to impair some of the aforementioned pathways, little is known on their modulatory effect on cartilage mechanoresponsiveness. This study aims at investigating the effect of mechanical loading in healthy and in vitro diseased cartilage models using pro-hypertrophic Wnt agonist CHIR99021 and the pro-catabolic FB-fs 30 kDa.

Human primary chondrocytes from OA patients have been grown in alginate hydrogels for one week, prior to be incubated for 4 days with 3μM CHIR99021 or 1 μM FB-fs. Human cartilage explants isolated from OA patients have incubated 4 days with 3 μM CHIR99021 or 1 μM FB-fs. Both groups have then been mechanically stimulated (unconfined compression, 10% displacement, 1.5 hours, 1 Hz), using a BioDynamic bioreactor 5270 from TA Instruments. Expression of collagen type I, II and X, aggrecan, ALK-1, ALK-5, αV, α5 and β1 integrins, TGF-β1 have been assessed by Real Time-PCR and normalized with the expression of S29. Percentage of phosphorylated Smad2, Smad1 and JNK were determined through western blot. TGF-β1 content was quantified by sandwich ELISA; MMP-13 and GAG by western blot and DMMB assay, respectively. At least three biological replicates were used. ANOVA test was used for parametric analysis; Kruskal-Wallis and Mann-Whitney post hoc test for non-parametric.

Preliminary data show that compression increased collagen II expression in control, but not in CHIR99021 and FB-fs pre-treated group (Fig. 1A-B). This was associated with downregulation of β1-integrin expression, which is the main collagen receptor and further regulates collagen II expression, suggesting inhibition of Erk1/2 pathway. A trend of increase expression of collagen type X after mechanical loading was observed in CHIR and FB-fs group. ALK-1 and ALK-5 showed a trend toward stronger upregulation in CHIR99021 group after compression, suggesting the activation of both Smad1/5/8 and Smad 2/3 pathways. To further investigate pathways leading to these different mechano-responses, the phosphorylation levels of Smad1 and Smad2, Erk1/2 and JNK proteins are currently being studied. Preliminary results show that Smad2, Smad1 and JNK protein levels increased in all groups after mechanical loading, independently of an increase in TGF-β1 expression or content. Compression further increased phosphorylation of Smad2, but not of Smad1, in all groups.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 89 - 89
1 Mar 2021
Govaerts A Graceffa V Lories R Jonkers I
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Mechanical loading regulates the metabolism of chondrocytes in cartilage1. Nowadays, studies exploring the in vitro response of cartilage towards loading often rely on bioreactor experiments applying only compressive loading. This is likely not sufficiently representative for the complex multi-directional loading profile in vivo (i.e. where typical compressive and shear loading are both present). The impact of multi-axial loading is specifically relevant in the context of the onset of osteoarthritis (OA) due to joint destabilization. Here, alterations in the 3D loading profile, and in particular increased shear forces, are suggested to initiate catabolic molecular responses leading to cartilage degeneration3. However, in vitro/ex vivo data confirming this hypothesis are currently lacking. Therefore, we aim to investigate how increased shear loading affects the metabolism and ECM deposition of a healthy chondrogenic cell line and if this response is different in osteoarthritic primary chondrocytes.

A murine chondrogenic precursor cell line (ATDC5) and primary human osteoarthritic articular chondrocytes (hOACs) were encapsulated in 2.2% alginate disks and cultured in DMEM medium for three days. Hydrogels seeded with the different cell groups were loaded in the TA ElectroForce BioDynamic Bioreactor and subjected to following loading conditions: (a) 10% compression at 1Hz for 1h, (b) 10% compression and 10° shear loading at 1Hz for 1h. Unloaded constructs were used as control. After loading, hydrogel constructs were stabilized in culture medium for 2 hours, to facilitate adequate gene expression responses, before being dissolved and snap frozen. RNA was isolated and gene expression levels specific for anabolic pathways, characterized by extracellular matrix (ECM) genes (Col2a1, Aggrecan and Perlecan), catabolic processes (MMP-3 and MMP-13) and chondrogenic transcription factor (Sox9) were evaluated using RT-qPCR. The TA ElectroForce BioDynamic Bioreactor was successfully set-up to mimic cartilage loading.

In ATDC5 cells, compression elicits an increase in all measured ECM genes (Col2a1, Aggrecan and Perlecan) compared to unloaded controls, suggesting an anabolic response. This upregulation is decreased when adding additional shear strain. In contrast to ATDC5 cells, the anabolic response of proteoglycans Aggrecan and Perlecan to compressive loading was lower in osteoarthritic chondrocytes, and Col2a1 expression appeared decreased. Adding shear strain reversed this effect on Col2a1 expression. Multi-directional loading increased transcription factor Sox9 expression compared to compression in both ATDC5 and OA chondrocytes. In OA chondrocytes, both loading regimens increased MMP-3 and MMP-13 expression. Shear loading reduces the anabolic effect of compressive loading in both cell types. OA cells presented more catabolic response to mechanical loading compared to precursors, given the increase in catabolic enzymes MMP-3 and MMP-13.