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Transthyretin deposition promotes progression of osteoarthritis
Author(s) -
Matsuzaki Tokio,
Akasaki Yukio,
Olmer Merissa,
AlvarezGarcia Oscar,
Reixach Natalia,
Buxbaum Joel N.,
Lotz Martin K.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
aging cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.103
H-Index - 140
eISSN - 1474-9726
pISSN - 1474-9718
DOI - 10.1111/acel.12665
Subject(s) - transthyretin , osteoarthritis , genetically modified mouse , synovitis , cartilage , transgene , biology , wild type , inflammation , medicine , endocrinology , microbiology and biotechnology , immunology , gene , arthritis , pathology , mutant , anatomy , biochemistry , alternative medicine
Summary Deposition of amyloid is a common aging‐associated phenomenon in several aging‐related diseases. Osteoarthritis ( OA ) is the most prevalent joint disease, and aging is its major risk factor. Transthyretin ( TTR ) is an amyloidogenic protein that is deposited in aging and OA ‐affected human cartilage and promotes inflammatory and catabolic responses in cultured chondrocytes. Here, we investigated the role of TTR in vivo using transgenic mice overexpressing wild‐type human TTR ( hTTR ‐ TG ). Although TTR protein was detected in cartilage in hTTR ‐ TG mice, the TTR transgene was highly overexpressed in liver, but not in chondrocytes. OA was surgically induced by destabilizing the medial meniscus ( DMM ) in hTTR ‐ TG mice, wild‐type mice of the same strain ( WT ), and mice lacking endogenous Ttr genes. In the DMM model, both cartilage and synovitis histological scores were significantly increased in hTTR ‐ TG mice. Further, spontaneous degradation and OA ‐like changes in cartilage and synovium developed in 18‐month‐old hTTR mice. Expression of cartilage catabolic (Adamts4, Mmp13) and inflammatory genes ( Nos2, Il6 ) was significantly elevated in cartilage from 6‐month‐old hTTR ‐ TG mice compared with WT mice as was the level of phospho‐ NF ‐κB p65. Intra‐articular injection of aggregated TTR in WT mice increased synovitis and significantly increased expression of inflammatory genes in synovium. These findings are the first to show that TTR deposition increases disease severity in the murine DMM and aging model of OA.

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