4.5 Article

The detrimental effect of iron on OA chondrocytes: Importance of pro-inflammatory cytokines induced iron influx and oxidative stress

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR MEDICINE
Volume 25, Issue 12, Pages 5671-5680

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jcmm.16581

Keywords

iron overload; mitochondrial dysfunction; osteoarthritis; oxidative stress; pro‐ inflammatory cytokines

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province [ZR2020QH075]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [82002325]

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In this study, it was found that pro-inflammatory cytokines disrupt iron homeostasis in chondrocytes, leading to iron overload and upregulation of catabolic markers. Oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction play crucial roles in iron overload-induced cartilage degeneration.
Iron overload is common in elderly people which is implicated in the disease progression of osteoarthritis (OA), however, how iron homeostasis is regulated during the onset and progression of OA and how it contributes to the pathological transition of articular chondrocytes remain unknown. In the present study, we developed an in vitro approach to investigate the roles of iron homeostasis and iron overload mediated oxidative stress in chondrocytes under an inflammatory environment. We found that pro-inflammatory cytokines could disrupt chondrocytes iron homeostasis via upregulating iron influx transporter TfR1 and downregulating iron efflux transporter FPN, thus leading to chondrocytes iron overload. Iron overload would promote the expression of chondrocytes catabolic markers, MMP3 and MMP13 expression. In addition, we found that oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction played important roles in iron overload-induced cartilage degeneration, reducing iron concentration using iron chelator or antioxidant drugs could inhibit iron overload-induced OA-related catabolic markers and mitochondrial dysfunction. Our results suggest that pro-inflammatory cytokines could disrupt chondrocytes iron homeostasis and promote iron influx, iron overload-induced oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction play important roles in iron overload-induced cartilage degeneration.

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